Creating new search systems to limit COVID-19 misinformation

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Researchers at the Cheriton School of Computer Science are working on new systems that increase the correctness and reliability of health-related searches.

A new paper on the search innovation was published by computer science PhD student Ronak Pradeep, co-authored by his supervisor Professor and Cheriton Chair Jimmy Lin, master’s student Xueguang Ma, and postdoctoral researcher Rodrigo Nogueira.

The paper highlights significant results including an 80 per cent improvement in searches, compared to baseline, to help people make better decisions about topics like COVID.

image depicting getting health information online

Search engines are the most common tools the public uses to look for facts about COVID-19 and its effects on their health. A proliferation of misinformation can have real consequences not only for public health but also on general social cohesiveness and confidence in institutions. 

“With so much new information coming out all the time, it can be challenging for people to know what’s true and what isn’t,” said Ronak. “But the consequences of misinformation can be pretty bad, like people going out and buying medicines or using home remedies that can hurt them.”

Even the big search engines that host billions of searches every day can’t keep up, he said, since much scientific data and research on COVID-19 has been published in such a short time.

“Most of the systems are trained on well-curated data, so they don’t always know how to differentiate between an article promoting drinking bleach to prevent COVID-19 as opposed to real health information,” Ronak said. “Our goal is to help people see the right articles and get the right information so they can make better decisions in general with things like COVID.”

Ronak said the project aims to refine search programs to promote the best health information for users. He and his research team have leveraged their two-stage neural reranking architecture called Mono-Duo-T5 for search, which they augmented with Vera, a label prediction system trained to discern correct from dubious and incorrect information.

The system links with a search protocol that relies on data from the World Health Organization and verified information as the basis for ranking, promoting and sometimes even excluding online articles.


To learn more about this research, please see Ronak Pradeep, Xueguang Ma, Rodrigo Nogueira, and Jimmy Lin. Vera: Prediction Techniques for Reducing Harmful Misinformation in Consumer Health Search. In Proceedings of the 44th International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval (SIGIR ’21), July 11–15, 2021, Virtual Event, Canada. ACM, New York, NY, USA.

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