Why are medical research articles tweeted? The news value perspective
Tint Hla Hla Htoo (),
Na Jin-Cheon and
Michael Thelwall
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Tint Hla Hla Htoo: Nanyang Technological University
Na Jin-Cheon: Nanyang Technological University
Michael Thelwall: University of Wolverhampton
Scientometrics, 2023, vol. 128, issue 1, No 9, 207-226
Abstract:
Abstract Counts of tweets mentioning research articles are potentially useful as social impact altmetric indicators, especially for health-related topics. One way to help understand what tweet counts indicate is to find factors that associate with the number of tweets received by articles. Using news value theory, this study examined six characteristics of research papers that may cause some articles to be more tweeted than others. For this, we manually coded 300 medical journal articles about COVID-19. A statistical analysis showed that all six factors that make articles more newsworthy according to news value theory (importance, controversy, elite nations, elite persons, scale, news prominence) associated with higher tweet counts. Since these factors are hypothesised to be general human news selection criteria, the results give new evidence that tweet counts may be indicators of general interest to members of society rather than measures of societal impact. This study also provides a new understanding of the strong positive relationship between news mentions and tweet counts for articles. Instead of news coverage attracting tweets or the other way round (journalists noticing highly tweeted articles and writing about them), the results are consistent with newsworthy characteristics of articles attracting both tweets and news mentions.
Keywords: Twitter; COVID-19; Altmetrics; News value (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1007/s11192-022-04578-1
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