The Lexicocalorimeter: Gauging public health through caloric input and output on social media

PLoS One. 2017 Feb 10;12(2):e0168893. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168893. eCollection 2017.

Abstract

We propose and develop a Lexicocalorimeter: an online, interactive instrument for measuring the "caloric content" of social media and other large-scale texts. We do so by constructing extensive yet improvable tables of food and activity related phrases, and respectively assigning them with sourced estimates of caloric intake and expenditure. We show that for Twitter, our naive measures of "caloric input", "caloric output", and the ratio of these measures are all strong correlates with health and well-being measures for the contiguous United States. Our caloric balance measure in many cases outperforms both its constituent quantities; is tunable to specific health and well-being measures such as diabetes rates; has the capability of providing a real-time signal reflecting a population's health; and has the potential to be used alongside traditional survey data in the development of public policy and collective self-awareness. Because our Lexicocalorimeter is a linear superposition of principled phrase scores, we also show we can move beyond correlations to explore what people talk about in collective detail, and assist in the understanding and explanation of how population-scale conditions vary, a capacity unavailable to black-box type methods.

MeSH terms

  • Energy Intake*
  • Epidemiological Monitoring
  • Food / statistics & numerical data
  • Humans
  • Public Health / methods*
  • Public Health / statistics & numerical data
  • Social Media / statistics & numerical data*
  • United States

Grants and funding

PSD was supported by NSF CA-REER Grant No. 0846668. CMD and PSD were supported by NSF BIGDATA Grant No.1447634. The funder Women, Infants and Children, East Boston provided support in the form of salary for author SCA, but did not have any additional role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. The specific roles of these authors are articulated in the author contributions section.