
Social Media and the COVID-19: South African and Zimbabwean Netizens’ Response to a Pandemic
Author(s) -
Murimo Bethel Mutanga,
Oswelled Ureke,
Tarirai Chani
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
indonesian journal of information systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2623-0119
pISSN - 2623-2308
DOI - 10.24002/ijis.v4i1.4338
Subject(s) - social media , globe , variety (cybernetics) , latent dirichlet allocation , pandemic , political science , public sphere , public relations , topic model , sociology , internet privacy , media studies , covid-19 , politics , computer science , psychology , artificial intelligence , law , medicine , disease , pathology , neuroscience , infectious disease (medical specialty)
Since the end of 2019, the world faced a major health crisis in the form of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. To mitigate the impact of the pandemic, governments across the globe instituted measures such as restricting local and international travel and in many cases, ordering citizens to stay indoors. Considering the social and economic impact of these restrictions it becomes crucial to investigate internet citizens’ (netizens) perception about the precautionary measures adopted. The study is anchored in the digital public sphere theory, which treats social media applications as virtual platforms where netizens commune to share ideas and debate about issues that affect them. Social media platforms already have critical public views on the current pandemic. However, the majority of this data is unstructured and difficult to interpret. Natural language processing (NLP), on the other hand, makes the task of gathering and analysing vast amounts of textual data feasible. Extracting structured knowledge from natural language, however, comes with unique challenges due to diverse linguistic properties including abbreviation, spelling mistakes, punctuations, stop words and non-standard text. In this work, The Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) algorithm was applied to tweeter data to extract topics discussed by netzens from Zimbabwe and South Africa. The primary focus of this paper, is to comparatively explore the variety of topics that occupied twitter communities from the two countries. We examine whether or not the national identities that define and differentiate citizens of these countries also exist on Twitter as evident in the emerging topics. Furthermore, this work investigated public opinion by analysing how citizens discuss the issues around the COVID-19 pandemic on social media