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Detecting science-based health disinformation: a stylometric machine learning approach

Author

Listed:
  • Jason A. Williams

    (Augusta University)

  • Ahmed Aleroud

    (Augusta University)

  • Danielle Zimmerman

    (Augusta University)

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic showed that misleading scientific health information has become widespread and is challenging to counteract. Some of this disinformation comes from modification of medical research results. This paper investigates how humans create health disinformation through controlled changes of text from abstracts of peer-reviewed COVID-19 research papers. We also developed a machine learning model that used statement embeddings, readability, and text quality features to create datasets that contain falsified scientific statements. We then created machine learning classification models to identify statements containing disinformation. Our results reveal the importance of readability metrics and information quality features in identifying which statements were falsified. We show that text embeddings and semantic similarity do not yield a high detection rate of true/falsified statements compared to using information quality and readability features.

Suggested Citation

  • Jason A. Williams & Ahmed Aleroud & Danielle Zimmerman, 2023. "Detecting science-based health disinformation: a stylometric machine learning approach," Journal of Computational Social Science, Springer, vol. 6(2), pages 817-843, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:jcsosc:v:6:y:2023:i:2:d:10.1007_s42001-023-00213-y
    DOI: 10.1007/s42001-023-00213-y
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