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Ian Fitzpatrick writes, collects and shares things here.

Some of these things have to do with brands, some of them have to do with buildings and places or machines or computers (which are, you know, machines, too). Each of them has to do with people, and the ways in which we respond to the stimuli around us.
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Measuring Happiness through Facebook



An interesting evaluation of American happiness as measured through Facebook updates:

As we all know, Facebook lets people update their friends with status updates, and with millions of users, that’s a lot of data. Look at the aggregated data over time, and you could see some interesting trends.

The Facebook Data Team recently measured happiness in the United States based on these updates with a metric they call United States Gross National Happiness.

Measuring how well-off, happy or satisfied with life the citizens of a nation are is part of the Gross National Happiness movement. This graph represents how “happy” the nation is doing from day to day, by looking at how many positive and negative words people are using when they update their status: When people are using more positive words (or fewer negative words) in their status updates than usual, that day is happier than usual!

Related posts:

  1. The Optimist Conspectus: Benjamin Schmidt
  2. Give a Student Some Data, Get a Free Pie
  3. Data Talks, Data Walks
  4. Linking up with the Pneumatic Amplifier
  5. DIRECTV is about to get really, really interesting (I think)

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Published:
Oct 09.09

Author:
ian

Categories:
Links, People and Information

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Source Material:
Facebook Measures Happiness in Status Updates on FlowingData