Détail du document
Identifiant

oai:arXiv.org:2503.11845

Sujet
Computer Science - Social and Info... Computer Science - Computers and S... Computer Science - Machine Learnin... I.2.7 I.2.8 I.5.4 K.4.2 H.2.8 I.2.6
Auteur
Thakur, Nirmalya Fernandes, Niven Francis Da Guia Tchona, Madje Tobi Marc'Avent
Catégorie

Computer Science

Année

2025

Date de référencement

19/03/2025

Mots clés
health computer science advanced 0 research covid media social
Métrique

Résumé

Long COVID continues to challenge public health by affecting a considerable number of individuals who have recovered from acute SARS-CoV-2 infection yet endure prolonged and often debilitating symptoms.

Social media has emerged as a vital resource for those seeking real-time information, peer support, and validating their health concerns related to Long COVID.

This paper examines recent works focusing on mining, analyzing, and interpreting user-generated content on social media platforms to capture the broader discourse on persistent post-COVID conditions.

A novel transformer-based zero-shot learning approach serves as the foundation for classifying research papers in this area into four primary categories: Clinical or Symptom Characterization, Advanced NLP or Computational Methods, Policy Advocacy or Public Health Communication, and Online Communities and Social Support.

This methodology achieved an average confidence of 0.7788, with the minimum and maximum confidence being 0.1566 and 0.9928, respectively.

This model showcases the ability of advanced language models to categorize research papers without any training data or predefined classification labels, thus enabling a more rapid and scalable assessment of existing literature.

This paper also highlights the multifaceted nature of Long COVID research by demonstrating how advanced computational techniques applied to social media conversations can reveal deeper insights into the experiences, symptoms, and narratives of individuals affected by Long COVID.

Thakur, Nirmalya,Fernandes, Niven Francis Da Guia,Tchona, Madje Tobi Marc'Avent, 2025, Systematic Classification of Studies Investigating Social Media Conversations about Long COVID Using a Novel Zero-Shot Transformer Framework

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