Blog Posts in “Emotional Intelligence”

Twitter Users Annoyed by Both VP Candidates, but Biden Provokes Amusement, Optimism

Posted by Moritz in Crane, Emotional Intelligence, Politics

Given his boss’s flat, uninspired performance in the first presidential debate, the consensus coming into the vice presidential debate Thursday night was that Joe Biden would arrive on stage guns blazing, eager to display the passion President Obama had so sorely lacked. He did not disappoint, and the result was a fiery, often testy, exchange of views between Biden and his opponent, Congressman Paul Ryan. After witnessing the highly charged back-and-forth, we decided to use our emotional intelligence technology, Crane, to take a quick look at what people were saying on Twitter. (more…)

Building a Roadmap of Human Emotion: EMOTIONS & WORDS

Posted by Guest in Crane, Emotional Intelligence, Engineering

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by Andrés Gómez Emilsson

Hubs and Gateways: Last week we uncovered the Big Five Human Mindsets and showed how current emotions can predict future mindsets. This week we are going to reveal how and why people transition from mindset to mindset. Specifically, key things you will take away from reading this entry will be:

  • Which emotions work as stepping stones towards a happier and more positive state of mind.

  • That the things that makes you become happy are not the same as the things that help you stay happy.

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Building a Roadmap of Human Emotion: THE BIG 5

Posted by Guest in Crane, Emotional Intelligence, Engineering

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by Andrés Gómez Emilsson

Positive emotions. The size of nodes represents how common a given emotion is. The thickness of the edges is proportional to how often people travel between two given emotions.

Emotions are complicated, unpredictable and deeply personal. We feel them; we usually don’t think we can quantify them. Some people even claim that emotions are completely outside the sphere of what can be understood. After all, emotions are not perceived with the mind but instead felt with the heart, right?

But if we hope for technology that is more sensitive to human needs and interactions, we will need a more structured understanding of emotions. At Kanjoya, we’ve built a dataset that can finally take us there. For the first time, we’re uncovering the structure that underlies our disparate emotional experiences, and we’re doing it democratically and empirically — by learning from what real people really feel.

In a series of posts starting now we will walk through several insights we discovered while analyzing our dataset of emotion updates. In this first post we start by showing you how we discovered the big five human mindsets (not to be confused with the big five personality traits) and how your current emotion can predict your future.

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How Kanjoya’s Crane Understands Our Emotions

Posted by in Crane, Emotional Intelligence

The Crane emotional analysis engine grew up in the emotional heart of the internet, the Experience Project. Every day, members of the Experience Project are writing stories about who they are, how they feel, and what they’re doing. Every day, members interact with each other’s content in structured and emotional ways. And every day, Crane’s emotional engine learns from the lightheartedness, the joy, the anger, and myriad other emotions that abound on the Experience Project.

The result is a powerful and nuanced model of human expression. The Crane engine is aware of all the tricks we use to express ourselves online; it is sensitive to human emotion, not just a simplified notion of positive/negative.

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People Happy to See Santorum Go

Posted by Armen in Emotional Intelligence, Politics

After an especially fascinating and tumultuous Republican primary season, Rick Santorum bowed out of the race today. While the concession speech emphasized that it was a decision made in deference to his family’s needs, the reality was Santorum was now facing a monumental path to gain the nomination, with both mathematical and psychological odds deeply against him.

We though this was a perfect opportunity to use Kanjoya’s Emotional Intelligence tools to dig deep into the emotional reaction of folks on Twitter and discover: How did people feel about this (somewhat surprising) decision?   (more…)

An Emotional Roller Coaster for Cubs Fans on Opening Day

Posted by M.T. in Emotional Intelligence

Spring has not yet sprung, but just as they have done for the last 137 years, the Boys of Summer began their annual 8-month long marathon of a Major League Baseball season. To kick the season off with a bang, we at Kanjoya decided to have some fun and use Kanjoya Emotional Intelligence “EI” to track America’s favorite lovable losers, the Chicago Cubs. Kanjoya EI is our new, shiny, amazing, revolutionary product that can take almost any topic and analyze emotion within content around that topic in real-time. We are super excited about the power of Kanjoya EI!  Since our CEO, Peter Jackson’s, son, Brett, plays for the AAA Iowa Cubs, what better team to track than the Cubbies to have some fun and test the amazing abilities of Kanjoya EI.

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