4.7 Article

Wisdom of crowds detects COVID-19 severity ahead of officially available data

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-93042-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EC Horizon 2020 FIN-Tech
  2. EPSRC [EP/P028608/1, EP/P031730/1, EP/L015129/1]
  3. ESRC [ES/K002309/1]
  4. EC [H2020-ICT-2018-2 825215]

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The study found a significant relationship between the initial social media reaction to COVID-19 and observed mortality a month later in Italy, Spain, and the United States, with Italy showing the strongest association. The collective wisdom of the crowds during the early stages of the pandemic remarkably predicted mortality rates almost a month later, reflecting the severity of the pandemic in different regions.
During the unfolding of a crisis, it is crucial to forecast its severity at an early stage , yet access to reliable data is often challenging early on. The wisdom of crowds has been effective at forecasting in similar scenarios. We investigated whether the initial regional social media reaction to the emerging COVID-19 pandemic in three critically affected countries has significant relations with their observed mortality a month later. We obtained COVID-19 related regionally geolocated tweets from Italian, Spanish, and United States regions. We quantified the predictive power of the wisdom of the crowds using correlations and regressions of geolocated Tweet Intensity (TI) during the initial social media attention peak versus the cumulative number of deaths a month ahead. We found that the intensity of initial COVID-19 related tweet attention at the beginning of the pandemic across Italian, Spanish, and United States regions is significantly related (p < 0.001) to the extent to which these regions had been affected by the pandemic a month later. This association is most striking in Italy as when at its peak of TI in late February 2020 only two of its regions had reported mortality. The collective wisdom of the crowds at early stages of the pandemic, when information on the number of infections was not broadly available, strikingly predicted the extent of mortality reflecting the regional severity of the pandemic almost a month later. Our findings could underpin the creation of real-time novelty detection systems aimed at early reporting of the severity of crises impacting a territory leading to early activation of control measures at a stage when available data is extremely limited.

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