Researchers at the University of Cambridge British develop in application of measuring happiness

Researchers at the University of Cambridge British develop in application of measuring happiness

Developed by researchers at the University of Cambridge, the British applied to measure happiness, by combining data from smartphones and mood of their users.
According to the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) Wednesday that the application that the researchers called “feel the passion”, collects information from users of the Smartphones around the bustling environment and people who connect with them, and then compare it with the mood of the users.
The application is part of a project to find out the ways in which the use of mobile phones to improve general health and well-being.
Researchers believe the computer laboratory, University of Cambridge, that experience is the first collection of data users with their information.
The Commission blamed responsible for the experience of Professor Jason rintfro from the Department of psychology at the University of Cambridge, said it aims to use the more flexible approach of just look at the emotions of happiness, sadness, anger or a sense of neutrality, to collect data showing how different moods.
Rintfro said that this experience completely unique system, which was designed to measure happiness, which will help to understand how to recognize people for things, and how their behavior in reality.
Cambridge University researchers requires the Smartphone users provide their consent in advance, before you can use the data to measure the degree of happiness.