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June 17, 2009 5:51 PM PDT

TweetPsych: This is your brain on Twitter

by Josh Lowensohn
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We've covered several utilities that have found fun and creative ways to analyze Twitter messages, but TweetPsych takes the cake. This one looks at your past 1,000 Twitter posts and gives you a "psychological" profile, including how much you talk about yourself, work, money, and "negative emotions."

In other words, it's a great way to reinforce the fact that you're probably using Twitter for self-promotion, and/or as a way to kvetch. At least that was its analysis of my tweets.

In an introductory blog post about the tool, creator Dan Zarrella says the it works by cross-referencing the words and phrases you use in your tweets to two different dictionaries that are sorted into various psychological profiles. It then scores you in each category based on the results of other TweetPsych users. This makes it less about psychology and more about your personal lexicon, but the results are still quite fun.

The service works with any Twitter account, meaning you can use it on anyone else you know. As mentioned earlier, it only pulls from the last 1,000 or so tweets you've made, so the results will not be nearly as detailed if you're a new Twitter user.

TweetPsych analyzes your old Twitter messages to figure out what's going on inside that head of yours.

(Credit: CNET)
April 15, 2008 2:19 PM PDT

Lexicon: Meet Facebook's answer to Google Zeitgeist

by Caroline McCarthy
  • 2 comments

Something was getting talked about around January 1. Wonder what it was?

(Credit: Facebook)

Are Facebook members more likely to be talking about hamburgers in January or May? Well, you can find out.

The social network is about to launch Facebook Lexicon, a new feature that tracks exactly what users are chatting about in their public posts on each others' "walls," based on search queries, and turns them into graphs and charts.

"Facebook Lexicon aggregates and analyzes millions of Wall posts on the site every day to provide a snapshot of the collective conversation on the site," the company explained in an FAQ. "Users can query as many as five strings of a single word or two-word combinations. The analysis for Lexicon is done automatically without any person reading Wall posts and without access to any personal information."

It's not so much "how much is this getting talked about?" but rather "how many Facebook members are talking about it?" A Lexicon chart shows the number of Facebook users who posted a given one- or two-word phrase on public "walls"--on other members' profiles, group profiles, and event profiles--each day across a given span of time. Only data from September 8, 2007 on has been archived for the feature, and it currently can't be divided up by regional, school, or business network.

"More than anything, we want our users to learn more about the world around them by learning about the collective conversation on the site," the Facebook FAQ continued. "Lexicon is meant to be a fun, interesting way to look for trends in the topics and issues being discussed."

It's kind of like Google Zeitgeist, a feature that tracks the search engine's most popular queries across time. For Facebook, the launch of Lexicon likely has emblematic value: it's one of those "Look, we're the voice of a generation" moments.

Facebook used to have a detailed trend-tracking feature called Pulse, which it quietly axed early in 2007, though representatives said it wasn't permanently gone and would see a revamp. That hasn't happened yet; maybe, particularly considering Facebook's tendency to roll out a limited version of a new feature before expanding, Lexicon is the first glimpse at the reincarnated Pulse.

Originally posted at The Social
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