48 research outputs found
Tracking Fluctuations in Psychological States Using Social Media Language: A Case Study of Weekly Emotion
Personality psychologists are increasingly documenting dynamic, withinâperson processes. Big data methodologies can augment this endeavour by allowing for the collection of naturalistic and personalityârelevant digital traces from online environments. Whereas big data methods have primarily been used to catalogue static personality dimensions, here we present a case study in how they can be used to track dynamic fluctuations in psychological states. We apply a textâbased, machine learning prediction model to Facebook status updates to compute weekly trajectories of emotional valence and arousal. We train this model on 2895 humanâannotated Facebook statuses and apply the resulting model to 303 575 Facebook statuses posted by 640 US Facebook users who had previously selfâreported their Big Five traits, yielding an average of 28 weekly estimates per user. We examine the correlations between modelâpredicted emotion and selfâreported personality, providing a test of the robustness of these links when using weekly aggregated data, rather than momentary data as in prior work. We further present dynamic visualizations of weekly valence and arousal for every user, while making the final data set of 17 937 weeks openly available. We discuss the strengths and drawbacks of this method in the context of personality psychologyâs evolution into a dynamic science. © 2020 European Association of Personality PsychologyPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/163564/3/per2261-sup-0001-Open_Practices_Disclosure_Form.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/163564/2/per2261.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/163564/1/per2261_am.pd
The Internet as a Functional Communication Alternative for Socially Maladapted Individuals
Mentor: Randy Larsen
From the Washington University Undergraduate Research Digest: WUURD, Volume 6, Issue 2, Spring 2011. Published by the Office of Undergraduate Research, Joy Zalis Kiefer Director of Undergraduate Research and Assistant Dean in the College of Arts & Sciences; Kristin Sobotka, Editor
The Internet as a Functional Communication Alternative for Socially Maladapted Individuals
From the Washington University Senior Honors Thesis Abstracts (WUSHTA), Volume 3, Spring 2011. Published by the Office of Undergraduate Research. Henry Biggs, Director, Office of Undergraduate Research / Associate Dean, College of Arts & Sciences; Joy Zalis Kiefer, Office of Undergraduate Research / Assistant Dean in the College of Arts & Sciences; E. Holly Tasker, Editor; Kristin Sobotka, Undergraduate Research Coordinator.
Mentor: Randy Larse