What's in a tweet? Researchers use social media to measure national mood

July 23, 2010
What?s in a tweet?

Tweeters on the West Coast are considerably happier than those on the East Coast, according to researchers at Northeastern University and Harvard Medical School.

Tweeters on the West Coast are considerably happier than those on the East Coast, and Twitter users are happiest on Sunday mornings and unhappiest on Thursday evenings.

So say a team of researchers from Northeastern University and Harvard Medical School, who recently analyzed the language of 300 million in an effort to measure the collective happiness of people across the country.

All of their data is represented in a modified map of the United States that tracks the of users throughout the day.

By gaining access to real-time data, researchers say they could eventually explain how the collective mood of Twitter Nation changes in response to specific events, such as a sudden dip in the stock market, or the results of the Super Bowl.

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"Our method is a new way to extract information about people everywhere,” said Sune Lehmann, a postdoctoral research associate in the College of Computer and Information Science at Northeastern, who contributed to the ongoing study of the characteristics and dynamics of .

“Using this strategy, we could track how ideas and Internet memes spread,” he added.

Other collaborators included Northeastern’s Alan Mislove, an assistant professor of computer and ; Yong-Yeol Ahn, a postdoctoral research associate at Northeastern’s Center for Research; and Jukka-Pekka Onnela, and J. Niels Rosenquist, both of Harvard Medical School.

Researchers were able to infer the mood of each tweet using a psychological word-rating system developed by the National Institute of Mental Health’s Center for the Study of Emotion and Attention. The system ranks words based on how they make people feel.

What's in a tweet? Researchers use social media to measure national mood
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Tweets containing words such as “love,” or triumph,” for example, received high mood scores, whereas messages with words such as “hell,” or “death” earned low marks.

Researchers then calculated an hour-by-hour average mood score for users in each state, and geographically represented the data using a density-equalizing map in which each region is scaled to represent its number of tweets as opposed to its land area.

Sparsely populated states rack up far fewer tweets than those in more densely populated regions, leading to “higher fluctuations in mood that do not represent the underlying data and create too much [visual] ‘noise’ when using a regular U.S. map,” noted Mislove.

More information: http://www.ccs.neu … twittermood/

Provided by Northeastern University (news : web)

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knikiy
Jul 23, 2010

Rank: 1 / 5 (1)
Hmm. I wonder what percentage of the population uses Twitter regularly? I wonder what fraction of these twits are responsible for the bulk of tweets? I wonder what kind of shoes I should wear while I am having a lobotomy?
RobertKarlStonjek
Jul 23, 2010

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I notice in the animation that Mississippi never rises above red (least happy), and appears to be the only state to stay red.
JMadd543
Jul 24, 2010

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Not very good. My son would use the word "dead" or "death" if he were on Twitter talking about a PS3 game he plays. Has nothing to do with his mood! What a crock!
Nederlander
Jul 26, 2010

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What about sarcasm? 'Nice job'! doesn't necessary mean 'nice job!'.
Don't know about the USA, but regional /cultural differences in Europe are quite sharp; Germans use way less irony and sarcasm than the Brits or Czech do.
Richak28
Aug 01, 2010

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Don't need twitter, the best mood watcher is
the capital markets !!!
Rank 3.4 /5 (5 votes)
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