TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessing the Interplay Between Public Attention and Government Responsiveness With Digital Trace Data
T2 - Navigating Leadership and Followership in China’s COVID-19 Vaccination Campaign
AU - Song, Celine
AU - Xu, Ran
AU - Huang, Yi Hui Christine
AU - Ni, Shijun
AU - Fan, Yining
PY - 2024/6/3
Y1 - 2024/6/3
N2 - China’s digital campaign to “vaccinate all who can be vaccinated,” officially launched in December 2020, carries global implications. Grounded in the agenda-setting framework to reveal how the responses of different groups are shaped and their agendas interact, this study analyzed two years of Sina Weibo (the largest Chinese microblogging service) and Baidu (the leading search engine in China) search index data to investigate the interrelationships among different groups’ issue foci and the effects of sentiment, rationality, and moral motivation in the agenda-setting process. Large-scale computational analyses were conducted to determine the extent to which the Chinese government followed the public’s issue preferences and identify which segment of the public had a stronger ability to set the agenda. The results indicated that as the central government transitioned from leading to following the public, regional governments had a greater impact on the public agenda compared to the central government or media. The government, public, and media differed in their usage of sentiment and moral motivation on social media during the vaccination campaign, and this varied depending on the campaign’s stage. Notably, all stakeholders emphasized individual-centered values over community-centered values when addressing vaccination. The findings shed light on effective strategies for social mobilization through targeted public health messaging.
AB - China’s digital campaign to “vaccinate all who can be vaccinated,” officially launched in December 2020, carries global implications. Grounded in the agenda-setting framework to reveal how the responses of different groups are shaped and their agendas interact, this study analyzed two years of Sina Weibo (the largest Chinese microblogging service) and Baidu (the leading search engine in China) search index data to investigate the interrelationships among different groups’ issue foci and the effects of sentiment, rationality, and moral motivation in the agenda-setting process. Large-scale computational analyses were conducted to determine the extent to which the Chinese government followed the public’s issue preferences and identify which segment of the public had a stronger ability to set the agenda. The results indicated that as the central government transitioned from leading to following the public, regional governments had a greater impact on the public agenda compared to the central government or media. The government, public, and media differed in their usage of sentiment and moral motivation on social media during the vaccination campaign, and this varied depending on the campaign’s stage. Notably, all stakeholders emphasized individual-centered values over community-centered values when addressing vaccination. The findings shed light on effective strategies for social mobilization through targeted public health messaging.
KW - COVID-19 vaccines
KW - agenda-setting
KW - digital trace data
KW - government responsiveness
KW - public attention
UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/08944393241258217
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85195262870&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/08944393241258217
DO - 10.1177/08944393241258217
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0894-4393
JO - Social Science Computer Review
JF - Social Science Computer Review
ER -