Vaccine adverse events have been presumed to be a relatively objective measure that is immune to political polarization. The real-world data, however, shows the correlation between presidential disapproval ratings and the subjective severity of adverse events. This paper investigates the partisan bias in COVID vaccine adverse events coverage with language models that can classify the topic of vaccine-related articles and the political disposition of news comments. Based on 90K news articles from 52 major newspaper companies, we found that conservative media are inclined to report adverse events more frequently than their liberal counterparts, while the coverage itself was statistically uncorrelated with the severity of real-world adverse events. The users who support the conservative opposing party were more likely to write the popular comments from 2.3K random sampled articles on news platforms. This research implies that bipartisanship can still play a significant role in forming public opinion on the COVID vaccine even after the majority of the population's vaccination
翻译:根据52家主要报纸公司发表的90K新闻文章,我们发现保守媒体比自由派媒体更愿意报道负面事件,而报道本身在统计上与真实世界的不利事件的严重性不相干。支持保守派反对党的用户更可能从新闻平台上的2.3K随机抽样文章中撰写民众评论。这项研究表明,即使在大多数人口接种疫苗之后,两党仍然可以在形成关于COVID疫苗的舆论方面发挥重要作用。