TY - JOUR AU - Cuesta-Cambra, Ubaldo AU - Martí­nez-Martí­nez, Luz AU - Niño-González, José-Ignacio PY - 2019/03/25 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - An analysis of pro-vaccine and anti-vaccine information on social networks and the internet: Visual and emotional patterns JF - Profesional de la información / Information Professional JA - EPI VL - 28 IS - 2 SE - Artí­culos de investigación / Research articles DO - 10.3145/epi.2019.mar.17 UR - https://revista.profesionaldelainformacion.com/index.php/EPI/article/view/epi.2019.mar.17 SP - AB - The communication of information about vaccines and anti-vaccines is analyzed through the monitoring of issuers, news sites, groups, and messages in social networks. We also investigate the effects of information on people´s attention, emotion, and engagement, which were analyzed using eye tracking, galvanic skin response (GSR) and facial expression methods. Results: the flow of communication was not constant, both in the press and on web sites (376 news in 2015, 74 in 2016, 69 in 2017 and, 268 in 2018); posts were informative and neutral; and 80% came from non-professional sources (only 17% were written by a journalist and 3% by a health specialist). On social networks, anti-vaccine Facebook messages and groups were identified, and a mapping of influencers is presented. Analysis of the temporal evolution (years 2015 to 2018) of communicative flows showed that anti-vaccine posts decreased. Gender differences appeared in the visual exploration of information sources and in the provoked emotion responses (GSR and facial expression). In pro-vaccine pages women looked at the headline first, while men looked at the photograph. Emotional responses and engagement did not show differences between anti-vaccine and pro-vaccine web sites. No differences were found in the emotion provoked (GSR) between both website types: anti-vaccination persuasion occurred via cognitive, not emotional, methods by using heuristics (e.g., conspiracy theories). Emotional responses and engagement did not show differences between pro-vaccine and anti-vaccine web sites. ER -