Home really is where the heart is

By ANI
Wednesday, September 29, 2010

LONDON - “Home is where the heart is,” goes the old adage, and now Cambridge University researchers have proved it right-they have for the first time confirmed that humans are happiest when at home simply by monitoring a person’s mobile phone use.

Experts say the study’s conclusions, reached by analysing a person’s emotion and behaviour while on a phone, could pave the way for a better understanding of human psychology. hey say that by analysing people in “natural environments”, psychologists could reach better conclusions through unobtrusive methods when studying periods of happiness, anger or stress.

While the researchers said the technology was safe, it could lead to fears that advertisers could one day be able to “read” a person’s mood.

In their study, they assessed how a person was influenced by their surroundings, the time of day and their relationships with others.

They concluded that a person’s location had a “pronounced effect on the users’ state of mind” with almost half of respondents found to be most happy when in residential locations while 54 per cent recorded “sad” emotions at work.

The pioneering study also found users exhibited more “intense emotions” at night while people expressed their emotions more in smaller groups than in larger crowds.

Dr Cecilia Mascolo, who led the study, said the new technology would enable psychologists to “get out of laboratories” and “artificial” environments and analyse people in more natural settings without the need for surveys.

“Our research confirmed that we can study the same (human behaviour) with this new technology,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

“We are able to undertake longer studies with more people and build a better picture of people’s behaviour that we have not been able to do before now.

“Mobile phones are powerful tools to allow studies of a person’s behaviour and we can do that in a way that is safe and unobtrusive … and when they are in a more natural environment,” she added.

In their study, a group of 18 volunteers were given a modified Nokia 6210 Navigator phone over 10 days while at the same time recording their emotions in a diary.

Researchers then used mobile phone speech recognition software to track a person’s emotional behaviour.

Discussions were then cross referenced with existing speech studies while GPS was used to pinpoint a person’s location when talking on their phone and Bluetooth technology to gauge who they were speaking to.

The study was presented at the Association for Computing Machinery’s conference in Copenhagen. (ANI)

Filed under: Science and Technology

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