Fact: Posting A Positive Message On Facebook Actually Helps To Spread Happiness

Posting A Positive Message On Facebook Actually Helps To Spread Happiness
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Posting a negative message on Facebook about your crap day may make you feel better for an instant, but posting a positive one has far better results.

According to new research, a positive status update helps to spread happiness among the people in your network.

Pretty cool, isn't it?

Analysis of more than a billion anonymised status updates among more than 100 million Facebook users has shown posting a positive message can be contagious.

Researchers analysed status updates on Facebook in the top 100 most populous cities in the US between January 2009 and March 2012, using automated text analysis.

The study, published in the journal PLOS ONE, examined posts by people in cities where it was raining - known to increase the number of negative posts and reduce the number of positive ones - and the impact this had on the status updates of people in cities where it was not raining.

To make sure there was no "topic contagion" all weather-related status updates were removed from the analysis.

Each additional positive post generated an estimated 1.75 positive posts amongst friends while each additional negative post yielded 1.29 more negative posts.

"Our study suggests that people are not just choosing other people like themselves to associate with but actually causing their friends' emotional expressions to change," lead author James Fowler, professor of political science in the School of Medicine at University of California, San Diego.

"We have enough power in this data set to show that emotional expressions spread online and also that positive expressions spread more than negative."

He added that he believed the study probably under estimated how much emotion spreads through digital social media.

"It is possible that emotional contagion online is even stronger than we were able to measure," he said.

"For our analysis, to get away from measuring the effect of the rain itself, we had to exclude the effects of posts on friends who live in the same cities.

"But we have a pretty good sense from other studies that people who live near each other have stronger relationships and influence each other even more. If we could measure those relationships, we would probably find even more contagion."

The researchers said the findings raised the prospect of "greater spikes" in global emotion in the future with the growth in online communication, causing volatility in all aspects of life from political systems to financial markets.

It was possible that social media could be harnessed to create an "epidemic of well-being", they suggested.

"If an emotional change in one person spreads and causes a change in many, then we may be dramatically underestimating the effectiveness of efforts to improve mental and physical health," Prof Fowler said.

"We should be doing everything we can to measure the effects of social networks and to learn how to magnify them so that we can create an epidemic of wellbeing."