Canada's rural and suburban dwellers are happier than their urban counterparts. That would seem to be the indication from data in "The Geography of Happiness: Connecting Twitter Sentiment and Expression, Demographics, and Objective Characteristics of Place" published in PLOS ONE.
Looking at Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal as well as Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse the urban centres show more sad tweet words than the suburbs and rural areas, although rural areas often don't have enough tweets.
Does this reflect the joy of a tranquil country life as experienced for generations?
1 comment:
I'm not sure of the geography of the languages of Canada.
This study of tweets scored English words of happiness levels. It didn't work for other languages.
They talk about it in the paper.
Link:
10.1371/journal.pone.0064417
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