Hedonometer
A hedonometer or hedonimeter is a device used to gauge happiness or pleasure. Conceived of at least as early as 1880,[1] the term was used in 1881 by the economist Francis Ysidro Edgeworth to describe "an ideally perfect instrument, a psychophysical machine, continually registering the height of pleasure experienced by an individual."[2]
More recently, it has been used to refer to a tool developed by Peter Dodds and Chris Danforth to gauge the valence of various corpora, including historical State of the Union addresses, song lyrics, and online tweets and blogs.[3][4][5] It is operated out of the University of Vermont (UVM), and has been in use since 2008.[6] A version of the tool is available at hedonometer.org, which they call a sort of "Dow Jones Index of Happiness",[7] and hope will be used by government officials in conjunction with other metrics as a gauge of the population's well-being.[8]
Computer scientists trained the hedonometer to recognize the emotion behind data as tweets with sentiment analysis techniques. Danforth preferred a lexicon approach, that measures the weight of a word, due to the energy required for neural nets.[9]
As of 2020, the hedonometer at UVM scrapes about 50 million tweets each day. Using sentiment analysis, the hedonometer takes the emotional temperature of the words published by users of various platforms.[6]
See also
[edit]External links
[edit]- Hedonometer.org
- If you're happy, then we know it: Scientists build 'hedonometer' (July 24, 2009)
- Temporal Patterns of Happiness and Information in a Global Social Network: Hedonometrics and Twitter
- Great Hedonometer, Story Grid Podcast, airing August 25, 2016
References
[edit]- ^ Oxford English Dictionary definition
- ^ Edgeworth's Hedonimeter and the Quest to Measure Utility
- ^ Reuters - "Jackson's death was blogosphere's saddest day: study"
- ^ Dodds, Peter Sheridan; Danforth, Christopher M. (2010). "Measuring the Happiness of Large-Scale Written Expression: Songs, Blogs, and Presidents". Journal of Happiness Studies. 11 (4): 441–456. doi:10.1007/s10902-009-9150-9.
- ^ The Atlantic - "The Geography of Happiness According to 10 Million Tweets"
- ^ a b Mackenzie, Dana (2020-09-14). "How algorithms discern our mood from what we write online". Knowable Magazine. doi:10.1146/knowable-091120-1. S2CID 242984992.
- ^ Computational Story Lab - "Now online: the Dow Jones Index of Happiness"
- ^ Bloomberg Businessweek - "Forget GDP. Data Crunchers Measure Happy Tweets for Key Economic Indicator"
- ^ Mackenzie, Dana; Magazine, Knowable (19 September 2020). "How Algorithms Discern Our Mood From What We Write Online". The Wire Science.