Publication | Open Access
COVID-19: A Pandemic of Anti-Asian Cyberhate
22
Citations
22
References
2021
Year
Abuse DetectionVirus EpidemiologySocial Medium MonitoringCovid-19 EpidemiologyCommunicationVirtual HarassmentJournalismHateful TweetsCovid-19Computational Social ScienceSocial MediaSocial Medium NewsPolitical CommunicationLanguage StudiesContent AnalysisHate SpeechHateful Online AttacksCovid-19 PandemicPopular CommunicationInflammatory KeywordsAnti-asian CyberhateGlobal HealthSocial ComputingMass CommunicationArtsSocial Medium Data
Hateful online attacks targeting individuals of Asian descent have increased dramatically in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. This study examines daily trends in inflammatory keywords associated with anti-Asian cyberhate using data collected from Twitter between January 1, 2020 and February 28, 2021. Additionally, we explore the sentiment of tweets and track the evolution of discourse on Twitter regarding Asians and the coronavirus. Our results indicate that the usage of inflammatory keywords associated with anti-Asian hate on Twitter rose dramatically at the outset of the outbreak, and then spiked at various points over the next fourteen months. Notably, offline events and rhetoric appear to have affected the rate of hateful tweets about the pandemic targeting Asians. Additionally, we find that discourse on Twitter around the words China, Chinese, Asians, and virus has become increasingly negative and stigmatizing during the course of the coronavirus outbreak.
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