PMC:7795931 / 10369-11937
Annnotations
LitCovid-PubTator
{"project":"LitCovid-PubTator","denotations":[{"id":"73","span":{"begin":1206,"end":1212},"obj":"Species"},{"id":"74","span":{"begin":705,"end":713},"obj":"Disease"},{"id":"75","span":{"begin":1249,"end":1257},"obj":"Disease"}],"attributes":[{"id":"A73","pred":"tao:has_database_id","subj":"73","obj":"Tax:2697049"},{"id":"A74","pred":"tao:has_database_id","subj":"74","obj":"MESH:C000657245"},{"id":"A75","pred":"tao:has_database_id","subj":"75","obj":"MESH:C000657245"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"Tax","uri":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/taxonomy/"},{"prefix":"MESH","uri":"https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/"},{"prefix":"Gene","uri":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/"},{"prefix":"CVCL","uri":"https://web.expasy.org/cellosaurus/CVCL_"}],"text":"In summary, this paper makes several important contributions to the literature. First, existing studies did not pay sufficient attention to the spread and evolution of rumors during a public crisis [48,49,50], which is considered in our study. We expounded the impacts of information dissemination on epidemic evolution in scenarios with different levels of medical awareness of the virus, public health awareness, and government preferences and credibilities, which complements the research in this field. Second, most current studies regard information and disease transmissions as simultaneously happened and jointly induced by the physical movement of an agent [46], while this is not the case during COVID-19 pandemic as the internet obviates the needs for physical contact in information transmissions [51]. Thus, in our paper, we separate the information and disease transmissions and investigate the impact of heterogeneous information on the individual behaviors and disease dynamics. Third, unlike previous research on government information interventions with known risk [5,28,29,30], ours are on government information interventions with unknown risk. The lack of prior knowledge on the Corona-SARS-2 is the most striking feature of the COVID-19 pandemic, which weakens the usefulness of government action and calls for a reassessment of government information intervention under a crisis environment with high uncertainty. To this end, this paper demonstrates a couple of intervention dilemmas faced by government, which complements the existing theories."}
LitCovid-sentences
{"project":"LitCovid-sentences","denotations":[{"id":"T57","span":{"begin":0,"end":79},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T58","span":{"begin":80,"end":243},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T59","span":{"begin":244,"end":506},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T60","span":{"begin":507,"end":813},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T61","span":{"begin":814,"end":993},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T62","span":{"begin":994,"end":1163},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T63","span":{"begin":1164,"end":1435},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"T64","span":{"begin":1436,"end":1568},"obj":"Sentence"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"_base","uri":"http://pubannotation.org/ontology/tao.owl#"}],"text":"In summary, this paper makes several important contributions to the literature. First, existing studies did not pay sufficient attention to the spread and evolution of rumors during a public crisis [48,49,50], which is considered in our study. We expounded the impacts of information dissemination on epidemic evolution in scenarios with different levels of medical awareness of the virus, public health awareness, and government preferences and credibilities, which complements the research in this field. Second, most current studies regard information and disease transmissions as simultaneously happened and jointly induced by the physical movement of an agent [46], while this is not the case during COVID-19 pandemic as the internet obviates the needs for physical contact in information transmissions [51]. Thus, in our paper, we separate the information and disease transmissions and investigate the impact of heterogeneous information on the individual behaviors and disease dynamics. Third, unlike previous research on government information interventions with known risk [5,28,29,30], ours are on government information interventions with unknown risk. The lack of prior knowledge on the Corona-SARS-2 is the most striking feature of the COVID-19 pandemic, which weakens the usefulness of government action and calls for a reassessment of government information intervention under a crisis environment with high uncertainty. To this end, this paper demonstrates a couple of intervention dilemmas faced by government, which complements the existing theories."}