Imaginary Qualities of Actual Things

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Christina Dennaoui

Satirizing the real, one cultural reference at a time. Imaginary Qualities of Actual Things is a journal of digital culture, sarcasm, and cultural analysis.

An academic at heart and an online search and social media strategist by profession. Prior to my recent foray into the corporate world, I was a graduate student of religion and anthropology at the University of Chicago. My research focused on digital culture and Middle Eastern politics.


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From the IQAT Archives

The Middle East's Facebook Generation

Two Cases Regarding the Nature of Authority in Cyberspace

The Sublime Object That, in the Name of Ideology, is Idiocy

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A Few Notes About George Sodini, Misogyny, Failed Masculinity, and Cultures of Entitlement


Satire Fridays Archive

Satire Fridays #1: Hipster Runoff

Satire Fridays #2: Richard Lawson, How We Will Miss Thee at Gawker

Satire Fridays #3: Avoid this Job Dot Com

Satire Fridays #4: Banksy's Lesser-Known Works

Satire Fridays #5: Right-Wing Satire and Obama's 'Socialism'

Satire Fridays #6: Microsoft's Photoshop Problem

Satire Fridays #7: Satire, Darwin Style


@cdennaoui

    October 6, 2009 10:39 AM

    Facebook: How Happy Are We (on Facebook)?

    The folks over at Facebook analyzed the status updates of its users to generate an index of national happiness. They basically sourced status updates for key words like ” aThe process is more interesting than final results, I think. Nevertheless the experiment is worth reading:

    “Every day, through Facebook status updates, people share how they feel with those who matter most in their lives. These updates are tiny windows into how people are doing. They’re brief, to the point, and descriptive of what’s going on this week, today or right now.

    Grouped together, these updates are indicative of how we are collectively feeling. At Facebook, we’re always looking for ways to help people better understand the world around them, and we’re interested in how people express their emotions with one other and the world. So earlier this year, data scientists at Facebook started a project to measure the overall mood of people from the United States on Facebook, based on the sentiment expressed in status updates.

    The result was an index that measures how happy people on Facebook are from day-to-day by looking at the number of positive and negative words they’re using when updating their status. When people in their status updates use more positive words—or fewer negative words—then that day as a whole is counted as happier than usual.

    Though more countries or languages may be added later, the current result is notable since it is based on the updates of all English-speaking U.S. Facebook users. In this sense, it can count as an indicator of “Gross National Happiness,” a metric only measured currently via Gallup polls and national surveys in countries such as France and Bhutan. To protect your privacy, no one at Facebook actually reads the status updates in the process of doing this research; instead, our computers do the word counting after all personally identifiable information has been removed.

    For our Gross National Happiness index, we adapted a collection of positive and negative emotion words built by social psychologists. Examples of positive or happy words include “happy,” “yay” and “awesome,” while negative, or unhappy words, include “sad,” “doubt” and “tragic.” We also did a brief survey of some Facebook users, which showed that people who use more positive words, relative to the number of negative words, reported higher satisfaction with their lives…”

    For more, check out the Facebook blog.

    Tagged under: | facebook |Social Media |Sentiment |
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