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December 1, 2012
TecStudy:
We May Be Less Happy, But Our Language Isn't
By
Joshua E. Brown
If it bleeds, it leads, goes the cynical saying
with television and newspaper editors. In other words, most
news is bad news and the worst news gets the big story on the
front page.
UVM
mathematician Peter Dodds led a team showing that the English
language is biased toward being happy.
So
one might expect the New York Times to contain, on average,
more negative and unhappy types of words like war,
funeral, cancer, murder
than positive, happy ones like love,
peace and hero.
Or
take Twitter. A popular image of what people tweet about may
contain a lot of complaints about bad days, worse coffee, busted
relationships and lousy sitcoms. Again, it might be reasonable
to guess that a giant bag containing all the words from the
worlds tweets on average would be more negative
and unhappy than positive and happy.
But
new research shows just the opposite.
English,
it turns out, is strongly biased toward being positive,
said Peter Dodds, an applied mathematician at the University
of Vermont.
The
UVM teams study Positivity of the English Language,
is presented in the Jan. 11 issue of the journal PLoS ONE.
Two
happiness studies
This new study complements another study the same Vermont scientists
presented in the Dec. 7 issue of PLoS ONE, Temporal Patterns
of Happiness and Information in a Global Social Network.
That
work attracted wide media attention showing that average global
happiness, based on Twitter data, has been dropping for the
past two years.
Combined,
the two studies show that short-term average happiness has dropped
against the backdrop of the long-term fundamental positivity
of the English language.
Universal
positivity
In the new study, Dodds and his colleagues gathered billions
of words from four sources: twenty years of the New York Times,
the Google Books Project (with millions of titles going back
to 1520), Twitter and a half-century of music lyrics.
The
big surprise is that in each of these four sources its
the same, says Dodds. We looked at the top 5,000
words in each, in terms of frequency, and in all of those words
you see a preponderance of happier words.
Or,
as they write in their study, a positivity bias is universal,
both for very common words and less common ones and across sources
as diverse as tweets, lyrics and British literature.
Homo
narrativus
Why is this? Its not to say that everything is fine
and happy, Dodds says. Its just that language
is social.
In
contrast to traditional economic theory, which suggests people
are inherently and rationally selfish, a wave of new social
science and neuroscience data shows something quite different:
that we are a pro-social storytelling species. As language emerged
and evolved over the last million years, positive words, it
seems, have been more widely and deeply engrained into our communications
than negative ones.
If
you want to remain in a social contract with other people, you
cant be a
, well, Dodds here used a word that
is rather too negative to be fit to print which makes
the point.
Twitter
downer
This new work adds depth to the Twitter study that the Vermont
scientists published in December that attracted attention from
NPR, Time magazine and other media outlets.
After
that mild downer story, we can say, But wait there's
still happiness in the bank, Dodds notes. On average,
there's always a net happiness to language.
Both
studies drew on a service from Amazon called Mechanical Turk.
On this website, the UVM researchers paid a group of volunteers
to rate, from one to nine, their sense of the happiness
the emotional temperature of the 10,222 most common
words gathered from the four sources. Averaging their scores,
the volunteers rated, for example, laughter at 8.50,
food 7.44, truck 5.48, greed
3.06 and terrorist 1.30.
The
Vermont team including Dodds, Isabel Kloumann, Chris
Danforth, Kameron Harris, and Catherine Bliss then took
these scores and applied them to the huge pools of words they
collected. Unlike some other studies with smaller samples
or that elicited strong emotional words from volunteers
the new UVM study, based solely on frequency of use, found that
positive words strongly outnumber negative words overall.
Confirming
Pollyanna
This seems to lend support to the so-called Pollyanna Principle,
put forth in 1969, that argues for a universal human tendency
to use positive words more often, easily and in more ways than
negative words.
Of
course, most people would rank some words, like the,
with the same score: a neutral 5. Other words, like pregnancy,
have a wide spread, with some people ranking it high and others
low. At the top of this list of words that elicited strongly
divergent feelings: profanities, alcohol and tobacco,
religion, both capitalism and socialism, sex, marriage, fast
foods, climate, and cultural phenomena such as the Beatles,
the iPhone, and zombies, the researchers write.
A
lot of these words the neutral words or ones that have
big standard deviations gets washed out when we use them
as a measure, Dodds notes. Instead, the trends he and
his team have observed are driven by the bulk of English words
tending to be happy.
If
we think of words as atoms and sentences as molecules that combine
to form a whole text, were looking at atoms,
says Dodds. A lot of news is bad, he says, and short-term
happiness may rise and and fall like the cycles of the economy,
but the atoms of the story of language are,
overall, on the positive side.
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