Good Thinking

"We Feel" tool uses Twitter to provide real-time view of world's emotions

"We Feel" tool uses Twitter to provide real-time view of world's emotions
We Feel processes the world's tweets to provide a real-time map of emotional trends across the world (Image:CSIRO)
We Feel processes the world's tweets to provide a real-time map of emotional trends across the world (Image:CSIRO)
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The tool analyzes 32,000 tweets a minute (Image:CSIRO)
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The tool analyzes 32,000 tweets a minute (Image:CSIRO)
Tweets indicating pride (Image:CSIRO)
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Tweets indicating pride (Image:CSIRO)
Tweets indicating sadness (Image:CSIRO)
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Tweets indicating sadness (Image:CSIRO)
Tweets indicating cheerfulness, from the Oceanic region (Image:CSIRO)
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Tweets indicating cheerfulness, from the Oceanic region (Image:CSIRO)
We Feel lets users refine results by gender (Image:CSIRO)
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We Feel lets users refine results by gender (Image:CSIRO)
We Feel processes the world's tweets to provide a real-time map of emotional trends across the world (Image:CSIRO)
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We Feel processes the world's tweets to provide a real-time map of emotional trends across the world (Image:CSIRO)
The Federal budget announcement from 7pm on may 13th generated a large volume of emotional tweets across Australia (Image: CSIRO)
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The Federal budget announcement from 7pm on may 13th generated a large volume of emotional tweets across Australia (Image: CSIRO)
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A new online tool aims to create a real-time emotional map of how people all over the world feel, from analyzing how cheerful or depressed different countries might be, to how budget cuts or other news might hit people emotionally. Called "We Feel," the tool analyzes 32,000 tweets a minute to monitor people's collective mood swings and how their emotions fluctuate over time globally.

Researchers have examined blogs to measure the world's happiness levels, but WeFeel aims to do more in real time by leveraging the power of social media to accurately map people's emotions. The tool uses special language-processing algorithms to analyze the emotional content of tweets made in English, and processes those that indicate feelings, its developers claim.

“We Feel looks for up to 600 specific words in a stream of around 27 million tweets per day and maps them to a hierarchy of emotions which includes love, joy, surprise, anger, sadness and fear,” says Dr Cecile Paris, a Research Leader at Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). “You can explore emotional trends on a minute by minute time scale, across locations around the globe and gender to further refine the results.”

The CSIRO team developed the tool for for researchers at the Black Dog Institute, a not-for-profit organization dedicated to treating mood disorders, to help them figure out how accurately tweets could reflect poor mental health or observe how factors like the time of day, weather or news led to emotional shifts. According to the team, the data could help authorities take appropriate action such as creating effective public health campaigns.

Tweets indicating cheerfulness, from the Oceanic region (Image:CSIRO)
Tweets indicating cheerfulness, from the Oceanic region (Image:CSIRO)

“"The power of this information cannot be underestimated," says Professor Helen Christensen, the Black Dog Institute's Executive Director. "Should the real-time data gained using this incredible tool prove accurate, we will have the unique opportunity to monitor the emotional state of people across different geographical areas and ultimately predict when and where potentially life-saving services are required.”

The Twitter-based emotional map could also greatly benefit mental health researchers, allowing them to use social media to track a community's mental health in real time instead of having to base their actions on statistics that may be years old, the researchers say.

The We Feel Tool additionally allows users to explore specific secondary emotions further. For instance, instead of just broadly tracking sadness, users will be able to examine whether the emotion relates to shame, neglect, disappointment, sympathy or suffering.

The primary and secondary emotions are displayed on a segmented color wheel and their prevalence across time is displayed as a river stream which can be explored backwards across days or weeks. We Feel is available for viewing for a limited time via the project website.

Source: CSIRO

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1 comment
1 comment
christopher
And I bet all those 27 million tweets came with the original authors blessing for other people to use as they see fit ?