AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzes public opinions on Africa's innovation during COVID-19 using Twitter data, finding that 52% of tweets express positive sentiments.
  • The most commonly discussed topics include healthcare, imagination, and support, highlighting a cluster of themes that reflect how COVID-19 is driving social and technological innovation in Africa.
  • It concludes with practical recommendations for policymakers to leverage innovation ecosystems and suggests areas for future research improvement.

Article Abstract

This study investigates public sentiments and the essential topics of discussion on Africa's innovation amidst COVID-19. Web scraping techniques were used to collect and parse data from Twitter platform using the keywords "Africa Innovation COVID-19". A total of 54,318 cleaned English tweets were gathered and analysed using Twint Python Libraries. Our sentiment analysis findings revealed that 28,084 tweets (52 per cent) were positive, 21,037 (39 per cent), and 5197 (9 per cent) of tweets were neutral and negative, respectively, for Polarity sentiments. Notably, Healthcare, Imagination, Support, Webinar, Learning, Future, Rwanda, and Challenge were the most discussed topics on Africa's innovation during COVID-19. The topic labelling sentiments on the themes identified were positive, neutral, and negative, respectively. The study also revealed a cluster relationship between all identified topics. The relationship among these themes divulged how COVID-19 is positively shaping social and technological innovation in Africa. The study further presented practical implications to better position African leaders and policymakers to capitalise on the current innovation ecosystems and institutional capacities to transform the continent into a digital and innovation hub. The research concludes with theoretical recommendations and study limitations that will guide researchers and academicians in conducting future research in the subject area.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9877784PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/issj.12386DOI Listing

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