id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-344162-8gbe6qo7 Loomba, S. Measuring the Impact of Exposure to COVID-19 Vaccine Misinformation on Vaccine Intent in the UK and US 2020-10-26 .txt text/plain 8782 474 49 A large suite of complementary data were collected for each individual including socioecono-demographic status (age, gender, highest education level, employment type, religious affiliation, ethnicity, income level), sources of trust for information about COVID-19, political affiliation, social media usage, and reasons for being unsure about taking a COVID-19 vaccine (see Table 1 and Questionnaire, Appendix E). We asked respondents if they had encountered similar images to the ones they were exposed to on social media in the past one month, to explore the relationship between their vaccination intents and pre-study exposure to misinformation or factual information. Contribution of reasons that respondents provide for not being "definitely" sure of taking a COVID-19 vaccine (A, B) and contribution of sources of information that people trust (C, D), to the Pre-Exposure vaccine hesitancy (left of every subfigure) and Susceptibility to vaccine misinformation (right of every sub-figure) as measured by drop in vaccine intent-after controlling for socio-demographics. ./cache/cord-344162-8gbe6qo7.txt ./txt/cord-344162-8gbe6qo7.txt