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Coronavirus research topics, tracking twenty years of research

Autores

Aryani, Amir , Wang, Jingbo , Salvador-Carulla, Luis , Woo, Jihoon , Cheung, Cathy P. W. , Wu, Zhuochen , Yin, Hui , Xiao, Junhua , Lambert, Elisabeth A. , Howitt, Jason , Davidson, Jean M. , Yoong, Serene , Dixon, John B. , Climie, Rachel E. , SALINAS PÉREZ, JOSÉ ALBERTO, Bagheri, Nasser , Santiago, Celine , Williams, Joanne , Wickramasinghe, Nilmini , Ng, Leo , Zwack, Clara C. , Lambert, Gavin W.

Publicación externa

No

Medio

Sci Data

Alcance

Article

Naturaleza

Científica

Cuartil JCR

Cuartil SJR

Fecha de publicacion

10/06/2025

ISI

001505493000001

Scopus Id

2-s2.0-105007880538

Abstract

Research publications aimed at understanding the various aspects of Coronaviruses, particularly COVID-19, have significantly shaped our knowledge base. While the urgency to monitor COVID-19 in real-time has decreased, the continual influx of new research of monthly articles underscores the importance of systematic review and analysis to deepen our understanding of the pandemic's broad impact. To explore research trends and innovations in this space, we developed a pipeline using natural language processing techniques. This pipeline systematically catalogues and synthesises the vast array of research articles, leading to the creation of a dataset with more than eight hundred thousand articles from July 2002 to May 2024. This paper describes the content of this dataset and provides the necessary information to make this dataset accessible and reusable for future research. Our approach aggregates and organises global research related to Coronaviruses into thematic clusters such as vaccine development, public health strategies, infection mechanisms, mental health issues, and economic consequences. Also, we have leveraged the contribution of health experts to review and revise the dataset.

Palabras clave

Coronavirinae; coronavirus disease 2019; human; medical research; natural language processing; Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; Biomedical Research; Coronavirus; COVID-19; Humans; Natural Language Processing; SARS-CoV-2

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