It’s winter, flu season, and you’re at your computer feeling a bit woozy, with an unwanted swelling in the back of your throat and a headache coming on. If you’re like millions of other people, you might engage in a moment of Internet-enabled self-diagnosis. You pop your symptoms into a search engine, and in the blink of an eye dozens of health-related websites appear on your screen. That search supplied you with information—some useful and some not—but in today’s hyper-connected world, it also supplied a data point for those who survey disease outbreaks by monitoring how people report symptoms via social media. In fact, social media, cell phones, and other communication modes have opened up a two-way street in health research, supplying not just a portal for delivering information to the public but also a channel by which people reveal their concerns, locations, and physical movements from one place to another.
Trending Now: Using Social Media to Predict and Track Disease Outbreaks
Published 2012 in Environmental Health Perspectives
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2012
- Venue
Environmental Health Perspectives
- Publication date
2012-01-01
- Fields of study
Medicine, Computer Science, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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- No concepts are published for this paper.
REFERENCES
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