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Alarmingly, these comments frequently include incivility [4], such as profanity, name-calling, or shouting [5]. Particularly, social media has become a crucial tool for health communication, allowing health institutions to initiate campaigns and individual users to disseminate these campaign messages [6].
J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e57967
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Other social media sites may have different cultural norms that may impact incivility differently. Shmargad et al [58] point out that the frequency of incivility on platforms is dependent on platform norms (eg, moderator rules). On the basis of this discussion, we pose the following RQ:
RQ2: Does discourse incivility vary by cultural norms?
JMIR Form Res 2023;7:e50367
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Emotions and Incivility in Vaccine Mandate Discourse: Natural Language Processing Insights
Incivility has become a salient point of discussion in social media research. However, scholars across fields have found it difficult to conceptualize incivility. Incivility has been defined in a variety of ways, including impoliteness, profanity, and specific discriminatory acts (eg, former US president Trump caught on a hot mic in 2016 praising nonconsensual sexual encounters with women) [26-29]. Papacharissi [29] supplements this definition by including threat—in this case to democracy—as uncivil.
JMIR Infodemiology 2022;2(2):e37635
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