You are what you like! |
Be careful
what you "like" on Facebook. You're opening a small window on your
soul.
A
machine-learning algorithm can now predict human personality types using
nothing but what people like on the Facebook social media site. A team at
Stanford University in California and the University of Cambridge used data
from a questionnaire filled out by 86,000 people that identified their
"big five" personality traits. The results were correlated with their
Facebook activity.
On the basis
of between 100 and 150 Facebook likes, the team's algorithm could determine
someone's personality more accurately than could their friends and family, and
nearly as well as their spouse.
"In the
past, my research has looked at how accurately people can judge each other's
personalities," says Youyou Wu at Cambridge, one of the study's authors.
"It's surprising that computers can do better using just one piece of
information – likes."
In 2013, the
same group found that Facebook likes can predict private personal information
like sexuality.
Shallow assessment
David Funder
of the University of California, Riverside, says predicting a big-five score is
impressive, but it is just one component of personality. "This is a very
broad way of describing human personality. It's useful, but not intimate,"
he says. "It doesn't really comprise understanding on any deep
level."
Funder's own
work studying human personality uses more than 100 dimensions, not five. He
points out those humans have depths that the algorithms of Wu and Michal
Kosinski – Wu's co-author at Stanford – do not scratch. A spouse of 10 years
will know their partner in ways that computers are still far from fathoming.
However,
Kosinski and Wu's computational approach to understanding personality could be
useful in hiring, health and education, where short personality tests are
already used.
Their
techniques aren't confined to Facebook, so any pot of data that you generate –
websites you visit, phone calls you make, presents you buy – could be
aggregated and analyzed to figure out exactly who you are.
Work comes to you
Your
suitability for a job is one of the first problems that could be tackled.
Instead of people seeking and applying for specific jobs, hiring AI's would
roam pools of data, seeking the right candidate for a specific task, says
Kosinski. "Instead of having an 18th century way of recruiting people,
where you plead with the mill for work, the work comes to you," he says.
"This is the revolution."
Ideally,
every person would have full control of their own data and over which companies
and organizations can ask questions about them. But Kosinski acknowledges that
the algorithm could be used in an invasive way too, with such personal data
available to paying customers. "There's a very big dark side to the
technology," he says.
"With
one click of the button it could be applied to the entire population of the
world. We have to make sure that, in terms of policy and technology, we solve
those issues properly," Kosinski says.