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The simple reason Facebook’s mood study creeps us out

June 30, 2014 by Scott Rosenberg 36 Comments

You are viewing an old revision of this post, from June 30, 2014 @ 08:26:20. See below for differences between this version and the current revision.

puppets

By now I’m sure you’ve heard about that Facebook study of “emotional contagion,” in which the company (along with two researchers) tinkered with the newsfeeds of 689,000 users in 2012, to explore whether moods can spread based on the tenor of posts. (This Atlantic roundup will get you up to speed.)

Many academic observers are up in arms because experimenting on people has a long tarnished history, and there are rules around it that this study may have bypassed. The facts remain fuzzy there (just look at the crossouts in this piece!), but the issue is real.

The pushback, in turn, is that Facebook, like all big tech companies, does this sort of thing all the time; nothing happens on Facebook without A/B testing! So get over it.

Finally, there is a contingent of commentary that declares the experiment to have been “creepy,” for reasons that we can’t quite express but we viscerally share. You might say the news of this study has itself become an “emotional contagion.”

The most common explanation for this creep factor is that we recoil from the study’s exposure of Facebook’s “commercial behaviorism.” The researchers appear to have callously treated Facebook users as test subjects, rats in a Skinner box. No one enjoys that role; thus the mass creep-out.

I’m sure there’s plenty to that, but I think the public recoil is based on something even simpler. Facebook’s central idea — its “value proposition,” in bizspeak — is that if we give it a list of our friends, it will provide us with a personally tailored stream of their posts and shares. That stream, the newsfeed, is a phenomenally successful product — a river not of news but of social info. We know Facebook doesn’t show us everything, but to each of us, our newsfeed feels like a space that has been put together just for us.

It feels like home. But in fact, of course, it’s a private space that someone else owns. Most of us have never read the rental agreement. And until something like this mood study comes along, we don’t even think about the terms under which we live there.

So the true creep-out in Facebook’s study isn’t about research ethics or Skinner boxes; it’s about ownership of space. The “emotional contagion” study dramatically rips off a curtain that separated Facebook’s public face and its backstage. Publicly, Facebook woos us with a vision of a social information stream shaped by our individual needs and networks; backstage, the folks behind the curtain are pulling levers to find more efficient ways to hijack our attention and sell us stuff. (The frontstage/backstage theory sounds like The Wizard of Oz but is actually Erving Goffman’s.)

It all works beautifully until something wrecks the, um, mood. Facebook’s endless privacy snafus and “context collapse” disorders do that. Ads can do it, too, which is why Facebook has moved so gingerly to insert “sponsored posts” into the newsfeed.

The mood study is a perfect storm for Facebook because it’s not about privacy or ads or any other longstanding bone of social-network contention. It’s a pure instance of frontstage/backstage collapse. All it does is dramatically illustrate that, in the space so many of us have adopted as our digital home, we don’t call the shots.

Something that we’d embraced as organic and authentic — literally, “friend-ly” — proves instead to be crudely instrumental and manipulative. Everyone hates when that happens!

Of course the dustup won’t kill Facebook. It probably won’t even materially affect its business. But it is one more step in awakening the universe of Facebook users, which is nearly all of us, to ou predicament: We only think the place is ours. And the landlords — well, they really can be creepy sometimes.

Post Revisions:

  • August 20, 2014 @ 11:43:35 [Current Revision] by Scott Rosenberg
  • June 30, 2014 @ 16:14:53 by Scott Rosenberg
  • June 30, 2014 @ 09:34:43 by Scott Rosenberg
  • June 30, 2014 @ 08:26:20 by Scott Rosenberg
  • June 30, 2014 @ 07:50:08 by Scott Rosenberg
  • June 30, 2014 @ 07:45:52 by Scott Rosenberg

Changes:

June 30, 2014 @ 08:26:20Current Revision
Content
Unchanged: <a href="https:/ /www.flickr.com/ photos/louish/ 5391204219/"><img src="http://www.wordyard.com/ wp-content/uploads/2014/06/ 5391204219_df88e74805_z.jpg" alt="puppets" width="380" height="406" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3960" /></a>Unchanged: <a href="https:/ /www.flickr.com/ photos/louish/ 5391204219/"><img src="http://www.wordyard.com/ wp-content/uploads/2014/06/ 5391204219_df88e74805_z.jpg" alt="puppets" width="380" height="406" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3960" /></a>
Unchanged: By now I'm sure you've heard about that Facebook study of "emotional contagion," in which the company (along with two researchers) tinkered with the newsfeeds of 689,000 users in 2012, to explore whether moods can spread based on the tenor of posts. (This <a href="http:// www.theatlantic.com/technology/ archive/2014/ 06/everything- we-know-about- facebooks-secret- mood-manipulation-experiment/ 373648/">Atlantic roundup</a> will get you up to speed.)Unchanged: By now I'm sure you've heard about that Facebook study of "emotional contagion," in which the company (along with two researchers) tinkered with the newsfeeds of 689,000 users in 2012, to explore whether moods can spread based on the tenor of posts. (This <a href="http:// www.theatlantic.com/technology/ archive/2014/ 06/everything- we-know-about- facebooks-secret- mood-manipulation-experiment/ 373648/">Atlantic roundup</a> will get you up to speed.)
Deleted: Many academic observers are up in arms because experimenting on people has a long tarnished history, and there are rules around it that this study may have bypassed. The facts remain fuzzy there (just look at the crossouts in <a href="http:// www.forbes.com/ sites/kashmirhill/ 2014/06/29/facebook-doesnt- understand-the-fuss-about- its-emotion-manipulation- study/">this piece</a>!), but the issue is real. Added: Many academic observers are <a href="http:// text-patterns.thenewatlantis.com/ 2014/06/the-empire-strikes- back.html">up in arms</a> because experimenting on people has a long tarnished history, and there are rules around it that this study may have bypassed. The facts remain fuzzy there (just look at the crossouts in <a href="http:// www.forbes.com/ sites/kashmirhill/ 2014/06/29/facebook-doesnt- understand-the-fuss-about- its-emotion-manipulation- study/">this piece</a>!), but the issue is real.
Unchanged: The <a href="http:// www.talyarkoni.org/blog/2014/ 06/28/in-defense- of-facebook/ ">pushback</a>, in turn, is that Facebook, like all big tech companies, does this sort of thing all the time; nothing happens on Facebook without A/B testing! So get over it. Unchanged: The <a href="http:// www.talyarkoni.org/blog/2014/ 06/28/in-defense- of-facebook/ ">pushback</a>, in turn, is that Facebook, like all big tech companies, does this sort of thing all the time; nothing happens on Facebook without A/B testing! So get over it.
Unchanged: Finally, there is a contingent of commentary that declares the experiment to have been <a href="http:// www.theatlantic.com/technology/ archive/2014/ 06/even-the- editor-of-facebooks-mood- study-thought- it-was-creepy/ 373649/">"creepy,"</a> for reasons that we can't quite express but we viscerally share. You might say the news of this study has itself become an "emotional contagion."Unchanged: Finally, there is a contingent of commentary that declares the experiment to have been <a href="http:// www.theatlantic.com/technology/ archive/2014/ 06/even-the- editor-of-facebooks-mood- study-thought- it-was-creepy/ 373649/">"creepy,"</a> for reasons that we can't quite express but we viscerally share. You might say the news of this study has itself become an "emotional contagion."
Deleted: The most common explanation for this creep factor is that we recoil from the study's exposure of Facebook's <a href="https:/ /twitter.com/ zittrain/status/ 483443466790137856" >"commercial behaviorism."</a> The researchers appear to have callously treated Facebook users as test subjects, rats in a Skinner box. No one enjoys that role; thus the mass creep-out. Added: The most common explanation for this creep factor is that we recoil from the study's exposure of Facebook's <a href="https:/ /twitter.com/ jayrosen_nyu/ status/483442459809026051" >"commercial behaviorism."</a> The researchers appear to have callously treated Facebook users as test subjects, rats in a Skinner box. No one enjoys that role; thus the mass creep-out.
Unchanged: I'm sure there's plenty to that, but I think the public recoil is based on something even simpler. Facebook's central idea -- its "value proposition," in bizspeak -- is that if we give it a list of our friends, it will provide us with a personally tailored stream of their posts and shares. That stream, the newsfeed, is a phenomenally successful product -- a river not of news but of social info. We know Facebook doesn't show us everything, but to each of us, our newsfeed feels like a space that has been put together just for us.Unchanged: I'm sure there's plenty to that, but I think the public recoil is based on something even simpler. Facebook's central idea -- its "value proposition," in bizspeak -- is that if we give it a list of our friends, it will provide us with a personally tailored stream of their posts and shares. That stream, the newsfeed, is a phenomenally successful product -- a river not of news but of social info. We know Facebook doesn't show us everything, but to each of us, our newsfeed feels like a space that has been put together just for us.
Unchanged: It feels like home. But in fact, of course, it's a private space that someone else owns. Most of us have never read the rental agreement. And until something like this mood study comes along, we don't even think about the terms under which we live there. Unchanged: It feels like home. But in fact, of course, it's a private space that someone else owns. Most of us have never read the rental agreement. And until something like this mood study comes along, we don't even think about the terms under which we live there.
Unchanged: So the true creep-out in Facebook's study isn't about research ethics or Skinner boxes; it's about ownership of space. The "emotional contagion" study dramatically rips off a curtain that separated Facebook's public face and its backstage. Publicly, Facebook woos us with a vision of a social information stream shaped by our individual needs and networks; backstage, the folks behind the curtain are pulling levers to find more efficient ways to hijack our attention and sell us stuff. (The frontstage/backstage theory sounds like <em>The Wizard of Oz</em> but is actually <a href="http:// en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/Dramaturgy_ (sociology)">Erving Goffman's</a>.)Unchanged: So the true creep-out in Facebook's study isn't about research ethics or Skinner boxes; it's about ownership of space. The "emotional contagion" study dramatically rips off a curtain that separated Facebook's public face and its backstage. Publicly, Facebook woos us with a vision of a social information stream shaped by our individual needs and networks; backstage, the folks behind the curtain are pulling levers to find more efficient ways to hijack our attention and sell us stuff. (The frontstage/backstage theory sounds like <em>The Wizard of Oz</em> but is actually <a href="http:// en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/Dramaturgy_ (sociology)">Erving Goffman's</a>.)
Unchanged: It all works beautifully until something wrecks the, um, mood. Facebook's endless privacy snafus and <a href="http:// www.zephoria.org/thoughts/ archives/2013/ 12/08/coining- context-collapse.html">"context collapse"</a> disorders do that. Ads can do it, too, which is why Facebook has moved so gingerly to insert "sponsored posts" into the newsfeed. Unchanged: It all works beautifully until something wrecks the, um, mood. Facebook's endless privacy snafus and <a href="http:// www.zephoria.org/thoughts/ archives/2013/ 12/08/coining- context-collapse.html">"context collapse"</a> disorders do that. Ads can do it, too, which is why Facebook has moved so gingerly to insert "sponsored posts" into the newsfeed.
Unchanged: The mood study is a perfect storm for Facebook because it's not about privacy or ads or any other longstanding bone of social-network contention. It's a pure instance of frontstage/backstage collapse. All it does is dramatically illustrate that, in the space so many of us have adopted as our digital home, we don't call the shots. Unchanged: The mood study is a perfect storm for Facebook because it's not about privacy or ads or any other longstanding bone of social-network contention. It's a pure instance of frontstage/backstage collapse. All it does is dramatically illustrate that, in the space so many of us have adopted as our digital home, we don't call the shots.
Unchanged: Something that we'd embraced as organic and authentic -- literally, "friend-ly" -- proves instead to be crudely instrumental and manipulative. Everyone hates when that happens!Unchanged: Something that we'd embraced as organic and authentic -- literally, "friend-ly" -- proves instead to be crudely instrumental and manipulative. Everyone hates when that happens!
Unchanged: Of course the dustup won't kill Facebook. It probably won't even materially affect its business. But it is one more step in awakening the universe of Facebook users, which is nearly all of us, to ou predicament: We only think the place is ours. And the landlords -- well, they really <em>can</em> be creepy sometimes.Unchanged: Of course the dustup won't kill Facebook. It probably won't even materially affect its business. But it is one more step in awakening the universe of Facebook users, which is nearly all of us, to ou predicament: We only think the place is ours. And the landlords -- well, they really <em>can</em> be creepy sometimes.

Note: Spaces may be added to comparison text to allow better line wrapping.

Filed Under: Features, Project

Comments

  1. Derek Powazek

    June 30, 2014 at 11:11 am

    @scottros It *is* that, but it’s not *just* that. No one likes to find out they’re a lab rat after the fact.

  2. Scott Rosenberg

    June 30, 2014 at 11:13 am

    @fraying Sure. Oversimplified in 140 but the post I wrote agrees with you :-)

  3. Derek Powazek

    June 30, 2014 at 11:16 am

    @scottros Does it? My argument would be that a properly run community doesn’t do experiments on their users, period.

  4. Jonathan Zittrain

    June 30, 2014 at 3:24 pm

    @scottros You have @jayrosen_nyu to thank for the phrase! twitter.com/jayrosen_nyu/s…

  5. Scott Rosenberg

    June 30, 2014 at 4:13 pm

    @zittrain @jayrosen_nyu ahh good to know. Better switch my link to him then :-) thanks

  6. Digital Fieldwork

    July 1, 2014 at 4:26 am

    MT @scottros: Who owns your feed? FB mood study freakout isn’t about privacy; It’s a frontstage/backstage collapse wordyard.com/2014/06/30/the…

  7. Greg Lloyd

    July 1, 2014 at 5:12 am

    @scottros Yes. Facebook mood manipulation is a violation of place. Like Google Glass violates conversation.
    tractionsoftware.com/traction/perma…

  8. Greg Lloyd

    July 2, 2014 at 9:19 am

    See also Dana Boyd’s 1 July 2014 post: “What does the Facebook experiment teach us?”

    https://medium.com/message/what-does-the-facebook-experiment-teach-us-c858c08e287f

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    The “emotional contagion” study dramatically rips off a curtain that separated Facebook’s public face and its backstage. Publicly, Facebook woos us with a vision of a social information stream shaped by our individual needs and networks; backstage, the folks behind the curtain are pulling levers to find more efficient ways to hijack our attention and sell us stuff. (The frontstage/backstage theory sounds like The Wizard of Oz but is actually Erving Goffman’s.)

    The simple reason Facebook’s mood study creeps us out
    I started this blog in April as a means of maximizing the benefit I get from social networks. But over time, I find I like getting the most from social platforms while keeping them at arm’s length. That’s particularly true of Facebook.
    Share this:TwitterFacebookGoogleRedditTumblrLinkedInGoogle+Mitch WagnerLike this:Like Loading…

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  27. jamshid says:
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    Show Notes
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    Experimental evidence of massive-scale emotional contagion through social networks

    Emotional states can be transferred to others via emotional contagion, leading people to experience the same emotions without their awareness. Emotional contagion is well established in laboratory experiments, with people transferring positive and negative emotions to others. Data from a large real-world social network, collected over a 20-y period suggests that longer-lasting moods (e.g., depression, happiness) can be transferred through networks [Fowler JH, Christakis NA (2008) BMJ 337:a2338], although the results are controversial. In an experiment with people who use Facebook, we test whether emotional contagion occurs outside of in-person interaction between individuals by reducing the amount of emotional content in the News Feed. When positive expressions were reduced, people produced fewer positive posts and more negative posts; when negative expressions were reduced, the opposite pattern occurred. These results indicate that emotions expressed by others on Facebook influence our own emotions, constituting experimental evidence for massive-scale contagion via social networks. This work also suggests that, in contrast to prevailing assumptions, in-person interaction and nonverbal cues are not strictly necessary for emotional contagion, and that the observation of others’ positive experiences constitutes a positive experience for people.

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    So the true creep-out in Facebook’s study isn’t about research ethics or Skinner boxes; it’s about ownership of space. The “emotional contagion” study dramatically rips off a curtain that separated Facebook’s public face and its backstage. Publicly, Facebook woos us with a vision of a social information stream shaped by our individual needs and networks; backstage, the folks behind the curtain are pulling levers to find more efficient ways to hijack our attention and sell us stuff.

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    Teach and learn digital skills and web literacy. The pages in this section are full of fun things to discover, make and teach. Our global community is continually adding new activities, lesson plans and tutorials from across the web that make it easy to learn by doing. Anyone can use these educational resources—they’re free, open and backed by Mozilla’s non-profit mission.

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

    PNAS is one of the world’s most-cited multidisciplinary scientific serials. Since its establishment in 1914, it continues to publish cutting-edge research reports, commentaries, reviews, perspectives, colloquium papers, and actions of the Academy.

    >OK so. A lot of people have asked me about my… – Adam D. I. Kramer

    I can understand why some people have concerns about it, and my coauthors and I are very sorry for the way the paper described the research and any anxiety it caused. In hindsight, the research benefits of the paper may not have justified all of this anxiety.

    Impact factor – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    The impact factor (IF) of an academic journal is a measure reflecting the average number of citations to recent articles published in the journal.

    Sarah Kendzior (sarahkendzior) on Twitter

    Writer on politics, economy, media. Columnist for @AJEnglish. Researcher on Central Asia. Recovering academic

    Facebook, Statement of Rights and Responsibilities

    This Statement of Rights and Responsibilities (“Statement,” “Terms,” or “SRR”) derives from the Facebook Principles, and is our terms of service that governs our relationship with users and others who interact with Facebook. By using or accessing Facebook, you agree to this Statement, as updated from time to time in accordance with Section 14 below. Additionally, you will find resources at the end of this document that help you understand how Facebook works.

    ORBIS: The Stanford Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World

    ORBIS: The Stanford Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World reconstructs the time cost and financial expense associated with a wide range of different types of travel in antiquity. The model is based on a simplified version of the giant network of cities, roads, rivers and sea lanes that framed movement across the Roman Empire. It broadly reflects conditions around 200 CE but also covers a few sites and roads created in late antiquity.

    Milgram experiment – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    The Milgram experiment on obedience to authority figures was a series of social psychology experiments conducted by Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram. They measured the willingness of study participants to obey an authority figure who instructed them to perform acts conflicting with their personal conscience. Milgram first described his research in 1963 in an article published in the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology and later discussed his findings in greater depth in his 1974 book, Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View.

    Data mining – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Data mining, an interdisciplinary subfield of computer science, is the computational process of discovering patterns in large data sets involving methods at the intersection of artificial intelligence, machine learning, statistics, and database systems.

    Jon Kleinberg – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jon Michael Kleinberg (born October 1971) is an American computer scientist and the Tisch University Professor of Computer Science at Cornell University known for his work in algorithms and networks.

    Unobtrusive research – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Unobtrusive research (or unobtrusive measures) is a method of data collection used primarily in the social sciences. The term “unobtrusive measures” was first coined by Webb, Campbell, Schwartz, & Sechrest in a 1966 book titled Unobtrusive Measures: nonreactive research in the social sciences.

    Journal That Published Facebook’s Study Raises Ethics Concerns – The Ticker – Blogs – The Chronicle of Higher Education

    The editor in chief of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the journal that recently published Facebook’s controversial research on its manipulation of users’ news feeds, is raising concerns about how Facebook collected the data.

    #19 – co,Co,CougH by Accky on SoundCloud

    The First Draft theme song. (CC BY-SA 3.0)

    Thanks for listening.

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