Well, it sure is pretty fascinating to do that kind of study and come back with results as commonsensical as we see here...
http://www.iq.harvard.edu/ blog/netgov/2010/07/mood_ twitter_and_the_new_shape.html
I quote - (with all credits where its due, none to me...)
A apparantly public domain result of the analysis is available here -
http://cdn.mashable.com/wp- content/uploads/2010/07/ twitter-moods.jpg
http://www.iq.harvard.edu/
I quote - (with all credits where its due, none to me...)
A group of researchers from Northeastern and Harvard universities have gathered enough data from Twitter to give us all a snapshot of how U.S. residents feel throughout a typical day or week.
Not only did they analyze the sentiments we collectively expressed in 300 million tweets over three years against a scholarly word list, these researchers also mashed up that data with information from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Google Maps API and more. What they ended up with was a fascinating visualization showing the pulse of our nation, our very moods as they fluctuate over time.
The researchers have put this information into density-preserving cartograms, maps that take the volume of tweets into account when representing land area. In other words, in areas where there are more tweets, those spots on the map will appear larger than they do in real life.
A apparantly public domain result of the analysis is available here -
http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-
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