'Big Data meets Psychology.'
UPenn recruited 75,000 volunteers, drew on more than "700 million words, phrases, and topics" from Facebook statuses and used word clouds to represent personality categories, age groups, as well as male and female. Read the article and other word clouds here (there is also a link to the study published in PLOS One).
For personality:
Naturally, there are some things to critique but pretty interesting nonetheless.
*Update (10/17)
New article on personality and geography in the U.S.
"People in the north-central Great Plains and the South tend to be
conventional and friendly, those in the Western and Eastern seaboards
lean toward being mostly relaxed and creative, while New Englanders and
Mid-Atlantic residents are prone to being more temperamental and
uninhibited, according to a study published online by APA's Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
"This analysis challenges the standard methods of dividing up the
country on the basis of economic factors, voting patterns, cultural
stereotypes or geography that appear to have become ingrained in the way
people think about the United States," said lead author Peter J.
Rentfrow, PhD, of the University of Cambridge. "At the same time, it
reinforces some of the traditional beliefs that some areas of the
country are friendlier than others, while some are more creative."
The researchers analyzed the personality traits of more than 1.5
million people. Through various online forums/media (e.g., Facebook and
survey panels), participants answered questions about their
psychological traits and demographics, including their state of
residence. The researchers identified three psychological profiles based
on five broad dimensions of personality -- openness, conscientiousness,
extraversion, agreeableness and neuroticism -- also known as the "Big
Five" personality traits. When the researchers overlaid the findings on a
national map, they found certain psychological profiles were
predominant in three distinct geographic areas. The data were collected
over 12 years in five samples with participants from the 48 contiguous
states and the District of Columbia. Overall, the samples were
nationally representative in terms of gender and ethnicity, with the
exception of a larger proportion of young people.
"These national clusters of personalities also relate to a region's
politics, economy, social attitudes and health," Rentfrow said. The
study found that people in the friendly and conventional regions are
typically less affluent, less educated, more politically conservative,
more likely to be Protestant and less healthy compared to people in the
other regions. The relaxed and creative states' residents are more
culturally and ethnically diverse, more liberal, wealthier, more
educated, comparatively healthy and less likely to be Protestant than
those living in other regions. The temperamental and uninhibited region
has a larger proportion of women and older adults who are more affluent,
politically liberal and unlikely to be Protestant.
As for what might have shaped the regional personalities, theories
plus research on migration and social influence offer clues, the authors
said. For instance, research has shown agreeableness is a trait often
found in people who stay in their hometowns, and the analysis indicated
that a large proportion of residents in the friendly and conventional
region lived in the same state the year before. The relaxed and creative
region may have been influenced by a frontier mentality that endures
with lots of young people, professionals and immigrants moving to the
region for educational and employment opportunities. In the
temperamental and uninhibited region, significant numbers of people have
moved away, and research has shown that people who move to another part
of the country are typically high in openness and conscientiousness and
low in neuroticism -- almost entirely the opposite of the temperamental
and uninhibited profile. "Considering that the temperamental and
uninhibited profile is marked by high neuroticism, it's reasonable to
speculate that social influence might facilitate the spread of anxiety
and irritability across the region," the study said."
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