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This corrigendum concerns a data error discovered while working on an extension of the
However, the original findings of the paper concerning the significant role that U.S.-based COVID-19 misinformation plays in the Canadian information ecosystem are strengthened by the corrected data. Specifically, while Canadians follow more Canadian accounts and retweet more COVID-19 specific Canadian content, a majority of the misinformation tweets retweeted by Canadian accounts that could be geolocated come from U.S.-based accounts. Moreover, following U.S.-based accounts continues to be associated with a greater likelihood to produce original content that contains misinformation. These updated results more clearly highlight that the U.S. is a source of misinformation for reasons that go beyond population size and Canadians’ general proclivity for U.S.-based information. The U.S. does not only play a significant role—it is the dominant source of Twitter-based COVID-19 misinformation for Canadians.
To fix the error, we started from the full follower network and collected information for every account that was excluded from the original collection. A small number of accounts could not be retrieved from the Twitter API in either the original or secondary pull due to deletion or privacy settings (representing 1.5% of total accounts queried). We then recalculated the geographic network of follows for each individual user in the sample. We also recalculated retweet and tweet behavior with the complete dataset of location data of all those whose content was retweeted/were followed.
Across the 187,225 English-language Canadian accounts with publicly available follower data examined here, Canadians follow a median of 148 Canadian accounts, 89 accounts from the United States, and 27 accounts from other countries. Approximately 47% of follows that can be geolocated were identified as Canadian, while 36% were based in the United States. See the updated
Ratio of U.S.:Canada twitter accounts followed by Canadian Twitter Sample.
In addition to Canadians following many American accounts, they also retweet a large volume of material from the United States. See the updated
Proportion of follows and retweets for Canadian Twitter users highlighting U.S.-orientation with total number of follow relationships and retweets above the bars.
Canadians engage heavily with U.S.-based accounts—far more than those from other countries. They also retweet content and particularly COVID-19 misinformation coming from U.S. accounts at rates higher than their followership behavior would suggest. However, Canadians do express a preference for domestic COVID-19 content that does not contain misinformation keywords.
To evaluate the relationship between exposure to U.S.-based information and direct propagation of COVID-19 misinformation (H1A), we had also examined actual user-produced content. We calculated the percent of COVID-related tweets from each individual in the Canadian sample that contained misinformation and correlated that with the percentage of their geo-located follows that are based in the United States. Despite the larger number of Canadian follows, we find that these results hold. A 1 standard deviation increase in U.S. follows (as percentage of overall follows) is associated with 0.06 (
Overall, this corrigendum highlights a data error in the original paper that caused an under-count of the number of Canadian accounts followed by Canadians. Instead of showing a 3:1 ratio between U.S. and Canadian follows, we find that Canadians follow approximately 31% more Canadians than Americans.
Despite this, the core findings of the paper hold and indeed are strengthened. Canadians, despite having a preference for domestic COVID-19 information, retweet COVID-19 misinformation coming from U.S.-based accounts at a rate disproportionate to both follow or overall retweet behaviors. Moreover, following more Americans on Twitter is still found be associated with a greater propensity to produce tweets that contain misinformation. The survey results are unchanged and continue to show a strong association between social media use, U.S. news consumption, and misperceptions regarding COVID-19.
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The Figure has been updated to exclude those accounts and follows where the country could not be identified. In the original manuscript, both other country and locations that could not be identified (but where information was provided) were grouped together. This update gives a clearer picture of the extent to which Canadian information on Twitter is driven by Canadian and U.S.-based accounts.
This Figure shows a significantly higher number of follow relationships than that in the original paper. The original paper used a dataset of user_id—location—country that consisted of 12,689,685 observations (including 1,727,005 Canadians and 5,427,131 Americans), whereas the corrected collection procedure yielded a dataset of 13,316,136 rows (including 2,327,924 Canadians and 5,436,678 Americans). Many of these missing accounts were among the most active and followed voices on Canadian Twitter. Despite the higher number of follows, the total geographically-identifiable number of retweets is actually lower—this is due to the aforementioned split of the category “Other” into “Other country” and “Unknown” for accounts that could not be identified with their location. The overall number of Canadian retweets is considerably higher (26,893,727 Canadian retweets vs. 4,126,648 in the original version).