July 28, 2009
Use Your iPhone to Track Your Happiness!
I love love love Fast Company magazine..in fact most of my ideas re innovation comes from Fast Company…
I first read Richard Leider's words of wisdom through his column on WORK in Fast Company and now we are his
web producers! So yes I find Fast Company provocative and ahead of the curve on just about anything to do with people and innovation!
Now I get Fast Company delivered each and every morning directly to my email…with tidbits of cool and groovy
gadgetry and way cool People…gotta love this! Well with this weeks theme about living with an abundant attitude..
Remember this is the week of the Virtual Abundance Expo..you can still register for the live sessions for $1.00-WOW!
…..only if you want to participate this week with the thought -leaders in the abundance world….
only if you want to hang with the best in attracting happiness, joy and prosperity….!
Here is the link to find out more…
http://www.1marketinglive.com/cmd.php?af=736398&p=61
Remember abundance is a concept often debated in spiritual and entrepreneurial circles.
I thought I'd bring technology and happiness together for you….not the other way around for a change!
Enjoy…and again please join in the conversation by leaving your comments…what do you think?
Use Your iPhone to Track Your Happiness
BY KIT EATON Mon Jul 27, 2009 at 11:11 AM
Just when you thought you'd learned about all the things your iPhone can do for you, along comes a new one: It can help you track your happiness. Taking part also helps someone write a PhD, so it's a double plus.
The new app is actually some psychology research being performed by Matt Killingsworth at Harvard, and it's designed to tackle one of nature's most ephemeral and yet fascinating questions: What is it that makes people happy? The site's blurb sets out the mission of the project, it's a "new scientific research project that aims to use modern technology to help answer this age-old question. Using this site in conjunction with your iPhone, you can systematically track your happiness and find out what factors–for you personally–are associated with greater happiness."
Essentially you sign up for the program, and then give the software a slew of personal information to give the researches some meaty data to think about later–it's stuff like how satisfied with your life you are, how much money you make, whether you're married, how liberal your political leanings are. Then, at repeated periods throughout the day you'll be pinged by your iPhone either by email or by SMS, and prompted to answer a short one-minute survey. This one asks how happy you are, what you're doing (yes, "making love" is an option, though hopefully it's an activity you'd prioritize over doing some science) whether you exercised recently, whether you're alone, who you're talking to and what you're thinking about.
After 50 successful survey answers you'll get a Happiness Report from the system, which will apparently help you work out the factors that contribute most to your levels of happiness. Or, I suppose, there's the flipside conclusion: You can learn what things make you most unhappy.
Hmm…that's where this idea gets interesting. I suspect most people who'd be generous enough to take part in the study are pretty self-aware, and already know, to a certain extent, what makes them happy. I just completed the first survey, and was told I was 60% happy–which doesn't actually tally as I'm very happy indeed. And surely having the iPhone as the chief input device will bias the survey? I understand it's a Web-connected gizmo you tend to have nearby at all times, making it ideal for the time-related part of the study…but Apple users tend to report high levels of satisfaction with their products, and using the iPhone is a constant reminder of how cool it is. That's going to skew things a bit."
Ya think?



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