Peer Review History

Original SubmissionJune 7, 2020
Decision Letter - Christopher M. Danforth, Editor

PONE-D-20-17359

COVID-19: Retransmission of Official Communications in an Emerging Pandemic

PLOS ONE

Dear Dr. Sutton,

Thank you for submitting your manuscript to PLOS ONE. After careful consideration, we feel that it has merit but does not fully meet PLOS ONE’s publication criteria as it currently stands. Therefore, we invite you to submit a revised version of the manuscript that addresses the points raised during the review process.

The reviewers both asked for reasonable minor revisions before considering acceptance, please address their comments in full.

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We look forward to receiving your revised manuscript.

Kind regards,

Christopher M. Danforth

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

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Reviewers' comments:

Reviewer's Responses to Questions

Comments to the Author

1. Is the manuscript technically sound, and do the data support the conclusions?

The manuscript must describe a technically sound piece of scientific research with data that supports the conclusions. Experiments must have been conducted rigorously, with appropriate controls, replication, and sample sizes. The conclusions must be drawn appropriately based on the data presented.

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

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2. Has the statistical analysis been performed appropriately and rigorously?

Reviewer #1: Yes

Reviewer #2: Yes

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3. Have the authors made all data underlying the findings in their manuscript fully available?

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Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: Yes

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4. Is the manuscript presented in an intelligible fashion and written in standard English?

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Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: Yes

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5. Review Comments to the Author

Please use the space provided to explain your answers to the questions above. You may also include additional comments for the author, including concerns about dual publication, research ethics, or publication ethics. (Please upload your review as an attachment if it exceeds 20,000 characters)

Reviewer #1: This paper analyzes the retransmission of the messages on Twitter that come from the official sources and that are related to COVID-19. The authors build the set of features for the tweets and examine the importance of each feature to message retransmission.

The message dissemination is an important topic, and has been studied extensively in the last few years. It is important however, to have a study that is focused on this topic during the times of crisis such as global pandemic.

The paper is neat, easy to understand and timely. I was enjoying reading it.

I find the most important contribution of the paper to be the topic lexicon, that will be potentially very useful for other researcher dealing with the communication in times of crisis. Another important result is the analysis of the most effective message structures that will drive the retransmission. The features are interpretable and the results could be used to improve the official communication channels.

The results of the model are not surprising, and I miss seeing the comparison to some baseline. A possible baseline could be the analysis of some other accounts during the crisis. Maybe the results are applicable elsewhere, and not only for the official accounts. This is not particularly important, but can be useful in the future work.

A suggestion - When measuring period effects, it is more useful to divide the time of the day to morning, afternoon, night... Splitting it on the hourly basis is too fine-grained and can result in smaller sample sizes and the lower confidences.

Nice paper. I would like to see it published.

Reviewer #2: - I recommend including a visualization of the retweet distribution to demonstrate its skew. Using a log-log scale would help with this.

- I'd like to see the formula for the negative binomial regression model written somewhere.

- Typo: "retweeing", page 22

- In the first few paragraphs of the discussion, the several references to prior research make it somewhat difficult to tell which statements are being attributed to your original work. Some simple phrasing (eg. "we find that...") can help with this.

- In the conclusion, it feels like a reach to attribute lower likelihoods to exclamatory and interrogative "language", given that this part of the analysis was entirely based on punctuation.

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Reviewer #1: No

Reviewer #2: No

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Revision 1

We have uploaded a document with a response to reviewers.

Attachments
Attachment
Submitted filename: Response to Reviewers.docx
Decision Letter - Christopher M. Danforth, Editor

COVID-19 Retransmission of official communications in an emerging pandemic.

PONE-D-20-17359R1

Dear Dr. Sutton,

We’re pleased to inform you that your manuscript has been judged scientifically suitable for publication and will be formally accepted for publication once it meets all outstanding technical requirements.

Within one week, you’ll receive an e-mail detailing the required amendments. When these have been addressed, you’ll receive a formal acceptance letter and your manuscript will be scheduled for publication.

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If your institution or institutions have a press office, please notify them about your upcoming paper to help maximize its impact. If they’ll be preparing press materials, please inform our press team as soon as possible -- no later than 48 hours after receiving the formal acceptance. Your manuscript will remain under strict press embargo until 2 pm Eastern Time on the date of publication. For more information, please contact onepress@plos.org.

Kind regards,

Christopher M. Danforth

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

Additional Editor Comments (optional):

Reviewers' comments:

Formally Accepted
Acceptance Letter - Christopher M. Danforth, Editor

PONE-D-20-17359R1

COVID-19: Retransmission of official communications in an emerging pandemic. 

Dear Dr. Sutton:

I'm pleased to inform you that your manuscript has been deemed suitable for publication in PLOS ONE. Congratulations! Your manuscript is now with our production department.

If your institution or institutions have a press office, please let them know about your upcoming paper now to help maximize its impact. If they'll be preparing press materials, please inform our press team within the next 48 hours. Your manuscript will remain under strict press embargo until 2 pm Eastern Time on the date of publication. For more information please contact onepress@plos.org.

If we can help with anything else, please email us at plosone@plos.org.

Thank you for submitting your work to PLOS ONE and supporting open access.

Kind regards,

PLOS ONE Editorial Office Staff

on behalf of

Dr. Christopher M. Danforth

Academic Editor

PLOS ONE

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