Values in Words: Using Language to Evaluate and Understand Personal Values

Authors

  • Ryan Boyd University of Texas at Austin
  • Steven Wilson University of Michigan
  • James Pennebaker University of Texas at Austin
  • Michal Kosinski Stanford University
  • David Stillwell Cambridge University
  • Rada Mihalcea University of Michigan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v9i1.14589

Keywords:

values, language, meaning extraction method, topic modeling, psychological assessment, individual differences

Abstract

People's values provide a decision-making framework that helps guide their everyday actions. Most popular methods of assessing values show tenuous relationships with everyday behaviors. Using a new Amazon Mechanical Turk dataset (N = 767) consisting of people's language, values, and behaviors, we explore the degree to which attaining "ground truth" is possible with regards to such complicated mental phenomena. We then apply our findings to a corpus of Facebook user (N=130,828) status updates in order to understand how core values influence the personal thoughts and behaviors that users share through social media. Our findings suggest that self-report questionnaires for abstract and complex phenomena, such as values, are inadequate for painting an accurate picture of individual mental life. Free response language data and language modeling show greater promise for understanding both the structure and content of concepts such as values and, additionally, exhibit a predictive edge over self-report questionnaires.

Downloads

Published

2021-08-03

How to Cite

Boyd, R., Wilson, S., Pennebaker, J., Kosinski, M., Stillwell, D., & Mihalcea, R. (2021). Values in Words: Using Language to Evaluate and Understand Personal Values. Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 9(1), 31-40. https://doi.org/10.1609/icwsm.v9i1.14589