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Main Authors: Bertani, Anna, Cortese, Alessandro, Pilati, Federico, Sacco, Pierluigi, Gallotti, Riccardo
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.18377
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author Bertani, Anna
Cortese, Alessandro
Pilati, Federico
Sacco, Pierluigi
Gallotti, Riccardo
author_facet Bertani, Anna
Cortese, Alessandro
Pilati, Federico
Sacco, Pierluigi
Gallotti, Riccardo
contents The COVID-19 pandemic has been accompanied by an infodemic of misinformation that impedes effective public health responses. This study examines relationships between socioeconomic factors and infodemic risk patterns across 37 OECD countries using Twitter data from 2020-2022. Employing dimensionality reduction techniques on 20 socioeconomic indicators, we identify complex correlations with infodemic measures that evolve throughout the pandemic. Countries exhibit distinct clustering in their infodemic profiles that transcend conventional socioeconomic categorizations. We find that dynamic information behaviors dominate initial crisis responses, while stable socioeconomic conditions become more influential as the pandemic progresses. News media diet diversity emerges as a significant protective factor, with pluralistic information ecosystems demonstrating greater resilience against misinformation. Additionally, institutional stability correlates strongly with reduced infodemic volatility over time. These findings highlight how infodemics are embedded within broader socioeconomic contexts, providing foundations for targeted interventions to build societal resilience against misinformation during future health emergencies.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_18377
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Socioeconomic Determinants of the COVID-19 Infodemic
Bertani, Anna
Cortese, Alessandro
Pilati, Federico
Sacco, Pierluigi
Gallotti, Riccardo
Physics and Society
The COVID-19 pandemic has been accompanied by an infodemic of misinformation that impedes effective public health responses. This study examines relationships between socioeconomic factors and infodemic risk patterns across 37 OECD countries using Twitter data from 2020-2022. Employing dimensionality reduction techniques on 20 socioeconomic indicators, we identify complex correlations with infodemic measures that evolve throughout the pandemic. Countries exhibit distinct clustering in their infodemic profiles that transcend conventional socioeconomic categorizations. We find that dynamic information behaviors dominate initial crisis responses, while stable socioeconomic conditions become more influential as the pandemic progresses. News media diet diversity emerges as a significant protective factor, with pluralistic information ecosystems demonstrating greater resilience against misinformation. Additionally, institutional stability correlates strongly with reduced infodemic volatility over time. These findings highlight how infodemics are embedded within broader socioeconomic contexts, providing foundations for targeted interventions to build societal resilience against misinformation during future health emergencies.
title Socioeconomic Determinants of the COVID-19 Infodemic
topic Physics and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.18377