2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2022.106447
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Text mining in mosquito-borne disease: A systematic review

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Cited by 18 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Although a few bibliometric studies on malaria are reported, they were either restricted to a particular geography (Latin America [ 4 ]; China [ 5 , 6 ]; India [ 7 , 8 ]; Malawi [ 9 ]; Portugal [ 10 ]; Central African Republic [ 11 ]), a particular period or a specific context related to malaria (artemisinin [ 12 , 13 ]; malaria vaccines [ 14 ]; malaria in pregnancy [ 15 ]; malaria vector resistance [ 16 ]; anti-malarial drug resistance [ 17 ]; citations [ 18 , 19 ]) or to a wider term such as mosquito-borne disease [ 20 ] or parasitology [ 21 ]. There was only one article that analysed global research on malaria [ 22 ] but it was focused on Plasmodium vivax and the data were retrieved only from the Scopus ® .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although a few bibliometric studies on malaria are reported, they were either restricted to a particular geography (Latin America [ 4 ]; China [ 5 , 6 ]; India [ 7 , 8 ]; Malawi [ 9 ]; Portugal [ 10 ]; Central African Republic [ 11 ]), a particular period or a specific context related to malaria (artemisinin [ 12 , 13 ]; malaria vaccines [ 14 ]; malaria in pregnancy [ 15 ]; malaria vector resistance [ 16 ]; anti-malarial drug resistance [ 17 ]; citations [ 18 , 19 ]) or to a wider term such as mosquito-borne disease [ 20 ] or parasitology [ 21 ]. There was only one article that analysed global research on malaria [ 22 ] but it was focused on Plasmodium vivax and the data were retrieved only from the Scopus ® .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although a few bibliometric studies have been performed on research related to malaria, ours is a first analysis of this kind as its targets global malaria bibliometric research through three different databases. Previously published bibliometric malaria-related research was either restricted to a particular geography (Latin America -Munoz-Urbano et al, 2014; China – Fu et al, 2015, Du et al, 2021; India – Singh and Mahanty, 2019, Gupta and Bala, 2011; Malawi – Mwendera et al, 2017; Portugal – Ferreira and Teixeira, 2019; Central African Republic - Nzoumbou-Boko et al, 2022), a particular period or a specific context related to malaria (artemisinin – Dong et al, 2022, Xu et al, 2018; Yao et al, 2012; malaria vaccines – Garg et al, 2009; malaria in pregnancy - van Eijk et al, 2012; malaria vector resistance – Sweileh et al, 2016; anti-malarial drug resistance - Sweileh et al, 2017; citations - Ghamgosar, Zarghani, and Nemati-Anaraki, 2021, Kolle, Vijayashree, and Shankarappa, 2017) or to a wider term such as mosquito-borne disease (Ong, Pauzi, and Gan, 2022) or parasitology (Ellis et al, 2020) or even COVID-19 (Mala et al, 2022). We could find only one article that analyzed global research on malaria (Garrido-Cardenas et al, 2019) but this article was focused on P. vivax and only from the Scopus database.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We further assessed the attributes by using two feature selection methods: RFE ( Figure 7 ) rigorously filtered all the variables and found five attributes highly related to the target outcome, and Boruta further selected the two most important attributes ( Figure 8 ) as the representative determinants. Feature selection is a standard procedure to filter or select the important attributes that determine the sentiments of the public [ 25 ], and we further pinpointed the sentiment determinants related to the vaccine booster by using multivariance logistics regression. This study’s procedures are standard across other infectious diseases [ 15 , 16 , 25 ], and the results of our model showing two representative attributes—“pfizer” and “mix”—were supported by Ahmed et al [ 13 ], Aygun et al [ 16 ], Marcec et al [ 17 ], etc., in that the brand of vaccine played a crucial role when the public plan was to administer an additional vaccine booster.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%