 We're more interested in sort of looking at the language people use to talk about vaccines in ways that justify certain types of relationships to the vaccines. So like if they are explicitly anti-vax like they don't want to take the vaccine, how do they talk about that? And then or if they're sort of they have questions, like how do they frame those questions? And because those questions come from a particular sort of social location, cultural viewpoints. So what we're really interested in putting together is kind of a cultural typology of vaccine misinformation. I think this is not necessarily just a story about social media. Like it's social media may have made the underlying social dynamics more transparent, but I mean I think I often go back to a recent story that was in the New York Times, there was reports of people in Missouri who were going to the doctor to ask to get vaccinated but asking their doctor not to tell anybody. Now that's not a story about social media, convincing anybody, that's a story about people interacting with their social networks and having a lot of sort of social pressure to not disclose that they have a vaccine. So I think that there are these underlying sort of foundational social relations that dictate how these problems are unfold. I think if we can do research that addresses those first and sort of challenges the sort of more superficial, broad brush kind of explanations, I think that's worthwhile.