Chris Danforth
Chris Danforth is a computer scientist and a professor of applied mathematics at the University of Vermont. He is known for his work with the Hedonometer, a tool developed for measuring collective mood with sentiment analysis.[1]
Danforth directs the Computational Story Lab at Vermont Complex Systems Center.[2] His research job is focused on exploring human behavior through social media data.[3]
In 2007, Danforth collaborated with Peter Sheridan Dodds to develop a tool to measure happiness that they called a "hedonometer." For creating it, a team directed by Danforth surveyed speakers of several languages to rate words on a scale of happiest to saddest.[4]
In 2016, Danforth collaborated with Dodds and Mark Ibrahim on writing about the phenomenon where Wikipedia articles are connected by "Philosophy".[5]
In collaboration with social psychologist Andrew Reece, Danforth found that depressed people post photos on Instagram whose colors are cooler and darker than those of non-depressed people. In 2020, he found evidence that analyzing social media techniques might identify viral outbreaks.[1]
References
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- University of Vermont faculty
- Living people
- American computer scientists
- University of Maryland, College Park alumni
- Bates College alumni
- Complex systems scientists
- 21st-century American mathematicians
- Graph drawing people
- Data and information visualization experts
- American network scientists
- American computer scientist stubs