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Vaporous Marketing: Uncovering Pervasive Electronic Cigarette Advertisements on Twitter

PLOS One · 11(7):e0157304 · 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0157304
Eric M Clark et al.
Eric M ClarkChris A JonesJake Ryland WilliamsAllison N KurtiMitchell Craig NorotskyChristopher M DanforthPeter Sheridan Dodds

BACKGROUND: Twitter has become the "wild-west" of marketing and promotional strategies for advertisement agencies. Electronic cigarettes have been heavily marketed across Twitter feeds, offering discounts, "kid-friendly" flavors, algorithmically generated false testimonials, and free samples. METHODS: All electronic cigarette keyword related tweets from a 10% sample of Twitter spanning January 2012 through December 2014 (approximately 850,000 total tweets) were identified and categorized as Automated or Organic by combining a keyword classification and a machine trained Human Detection algorithm. A sentiment analysis using Hedonometrics was performed on Organic tweets to quantify the change in consumer sentiments over time. Commercialized tweets were topically categorized with key phrasal pattern matching. RESULTS: The overwhelming majority (80%) of tweets were classified as automated or promotional in nature. The majority of these tweets were coded as commercialized (83.65% in 2013), up to 33% of which offered discounts or free samples and appeared on over a billion twitter feeds as impressions. The positivity of Organic (human) classified tweets has decreased over time (5.84 in 2013 to 5.77 in 2014) due to a relative increase in the negative words 'ban', 'tobacco', 'doesn't', 'drug', 'against', 'poison', 'tax' and a relative decrease in the positive words like 'haha', 'good', 'cool'. Automated tweets are more positive than organic (6.17 versus 5.84) due to a relative increase in the marketing words like 'best', 'win', 'buy', 'sale', 'health', 'discount' and a relative decrease in negative words like 'bad', 'hate', 'stupid', 'don't'. CONCLUSIONS: Due to the youth presence on Twitter and the clinical uncertainty of the long term health complications of electronic cigarette consumption, the protection of public health warrants scrutiny and potential regulation of social media marketing.

Aimwell Signal Relevance AIMWELL EDITORIAL

This publication published in PLOS One represents peer-reviewed research in Advertising, Commerce, Direct-to-Consumer Advertising directly relevant to Aimwell’s evidence intelligence infrastructure. It contributes to the FHIN network’s knowledge base on Advertising and supports data-driven clinical decision making for Aimwell member organizations.

AdvertisingCommerceDirect-to-Consumer AdvertisingElectronic Nicotine Delivery SystemsHumansMarketingSmoking CessationSocial Media

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Published2015

Source attribution: PubMed / NCBI · CrossRef

License: CC BY 4.0

Retrieved: May 21, 2026

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