AI agrees with mom
Sophisticated text-mining analysis using artificial intelligence finds a strong link between feeling good and taking good care of yourself
Sophisticated text-mining analysis using artificial intelligence finds a strong link between feeling good and taking good care of yourself
By Brian Caldwell Faculty of EngineeringSophisticated analysis by Waterloo Engineering researchers using artificial intelligence (AI) supports the conventional wisdom that taking care of yourself makes you feel good.
In a study involving more than 700,000 online journal entries, the researchers found strong associations between positive moods and getting enough sleep, eating well and exercising.
Even activities such as getting a haircut or having a manicure were linked to feeling calmer and happier.
“What appears to work are simple things people can do for themselves, such as resting well, eating well, exercising, meditating, yoga,” says Lukasz Golab, a management sciences professor at Waterloo. “We shouldn’t forget about these things because they seem to make a real difference.”
Anonymous journal entries used in the text-mining study were written by over 67,000 users of a mobile mood-tracking application. In addition to writing short entries, users recorded their moods from a list of 17 options.
Researchers built an AI computer model to identify words in entries associated with particular moods. They then analyzed surrounding words and phrases to try to understand the context.
“Word frequency doesn’t tell the whole story,” Golab says. “We needed another step in our methodology to recover the context in which a representative word was used.”
If the word ‘job’ was often used by people feeling stressed, for instance, the analysis would identify nearby words such as ‘busy’ and ‘overworked’ to help explain why people found their jobs stressful.
Golab says the strong associations between positive moods and taking care of yourself provide important insights for both individuals and governments.
“You may not be able to control the world around you, but you can control your lifestyle and your own good habits,” he says. “And in terms of public health, it is useful to confirm conventional wisdom with real evidence to make sound, data-driven decisions.”
Golab says technology at the heart of the study, which also found that more people reported feeling fatigued than happy, could be used as a screening tool to flag possible mental health issues in online social media posts.
“People seem to be busy and overworked and tired, and at some point chronic fatigue may actually become a public health problem that we should address as a society,” Golab says of the secondary finding.
The lead researcher on the study, Micro-journal mining to understand mood triggers, was former Waterloo graduate student Liuyan Chen. Her paper with Golab appears in the journal Computing.
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