Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Twitter Posts Can Reveal How Lonely You Are: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Nov, 2019 09:20 PM
  • Twitter Posts Can Reveal How Lonely You Are: Study

Researchers have found that users who tweet on loneliness are much more likely to write about mental well-being issues and things like struggles with relationships, substance use and insomnia on Twitter.


By applying linguistic analytic models to tweets, researchers were able to gain an insight into the topics and themes that could be associated with loneliness.


"Loneliness can be a slow killer, as some of the medical problems associated with it can take decades to manifest," said the study's lead author Sharath Chandra Guntuku, from University of Pennsylvania in the US.


"If we are able to identify lonely individuals and intervene before the health conditions associated with the themes we found begin to unfold, we have a change to help those much earlier in their lives. This could be very powerful and have long-lasting effects on public health," Guntuku said.


By determining typical themes and linguistic markers posted to social media that are associated with people who are lonely, the team has uncovered some of the ingredients necessary to construct a 'loneliness' prediction system.


As part of the study, published in the journal BMJ, researchers analysed public accounts from users based in Pennsylvania and found that 6,202 accounts used words such as 'lonely' or 'alone' more than five times between 2012 and 2016.


Comparing the entire Twitter timelines of these users to a matched group who did not have such language included their posts, the researchers showed that 'lonely' users tweeted nearly twice as much and were much more likely to do so at night.


When the tweets were analysed via several different linguistic analytic models, the users who posted about loneliness had an extremely high association with anger, depression and anxiety, when compared to the 'non-lonely' group.


Additionally, the lonely groups were significantly associated with tweeting about struggles with relationships (for example, using phrases like 'want somebody' or 'no one to') and substance use ('smoke,' 'weed,' and 'drunk')


"On Twitter, we found lonely users expressing a need for social support, and it appears that the use of expletives and the expression of anger is a sign of that being unfulfilled," Guntuku said.


Users in the group that didn't post about loneliness seemed to display some social connections, as they were found to be more likely to engage in conversations, especially by including others' user names (using '@twitter_handle') in their tweets.


In the future, the researchers hope to develop a better measure of the different dimensions of loneliness that online users are feeling and expressing.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

If that sounds familiar, it's because that's how Facebook decides what to show users of its online social network. 

Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment

Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment
Self-driving cars are "absolutely not" ready for widespread deployment despite a rush to put them to put them on the road, a robotics expert warned Tuesday.

Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted
Encryption shields 77 per cent of the requests sent from around the world to Google's data centres, up from 52 per cent at the end of 2013, according to company statistics released Tuesday.

Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted

Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook

Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook
Results showed that participants who share more about themselves on Facebook had greater connectivity of both the medial prefrontal cortex and precuneus. 

Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook

Never Tried Virtual Reality? Here's What It's Like

Never Tried Virtual Reality? Here's What It's Like
It doesn't take a high-tech headset to see that virtual reality is the rage. It's being touted as the future for all things sensory, from games to film and television, from storytelling to visual art

Never Tried Virtual Reality? Here's What It's Like

GM Buys Software Company To Speed Autonomous Car Development

GM Buys Software Company To Speed Autonomous Car Development
The Detroit automaker says it purchased Cruise Automation, a 40-person firm that was founded just three years ago.

GM Buys Software Company To Speed Autonomous Car Development