Published on in Vol 4 (2024)

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/54000, first published .
Using Social Listening for Digital Public Health Surveillance of Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Misinformation Online: Exploratory Study

Using Social Listening for Digital Public Health Surveillance of Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Misinformation Online: Exploratory Study

Using Social Listening for Digital Public Health Surveillance of Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Misinformation Online: Exploratory Study

Journals

  1. Rai S, Kornides M, Morgan J, Kumar A, Cappella J, Guntuku S. Detecting and monitoring concerns against HPV vaccination on social media using large language models. Scientific Reports 2024;14(1) View
  2. Boatman D, Jarrett Z, Starkey A, Conn M, Kennedy-Rea S. HPV vaccine misinformation on social media: A multi-method qualitative analysis of comments across three platforms. PEC Innovation 2024;5:100329 View
  3. Goel S, Lewycka S, Batheja D. Gender and Socio-Economic Inequities in Social Listening: Evidence from Two Quantitative Case Studies in India. Asian Bioethics Review 2025;17(3):385 View
  4. Miglioretto C, Beck E, Lambert K, Mehmet M. Social Listening as a Tool to Understand Nutrition‐Related Information Needs: A Case Study in Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics 2025;38(5) View

Books/Policy Documents

  1. Sutherland K. Artificial Intelligence for Strategic Communication. View