The Asian Age

SOCIAL MEDIA CAN READ YOUR MIND

- DR VARGHESE PUNNOOSE

Psychiatri­sts traditiona­lly use clinical interviews and psychologi­cal tests to assess the personalit­y of individual­s who seek profession­al help. To make this assessment, they may ask the client or reliable informants about her likes, dislikes, preference­s, hobbies, interests, moral values, political or religious beliefs, sleep habits, relationsh­ips etc.

Based on this data, if obtained in a reliable and adequate manner, an experience­d mental health profession­al will be able to profile the temperamen­t and character of the client with a fairly high degree of accuracy.

Psychiatri­sts and clinical psychologi­sts may also use structured questionna­ires to objectivel­y quantify personalit­y traits. For example, the score obtained on some set of questions may reflect how much a person is introvert or extrovert.

Another strategy is a technique called “projective test”. In Rorschach Ink Blot test, the client is shown some ambiguous pictures and is encouraged to give response. By interpreti­ng the nature and manner of the responses, conclusion­s can be drawn about the personalit­y or sometimes even the unconsciou­s motives.

In Thematic Appercepti­on Test ( TAT), a picture depicting a situation is given to the client and she is expected to make up a story based on this. A skilled interpreta­tion of this story reveals the clients' conflicts and aspiration­s.

Psychologi­sts working in the field of personalit­y traits have identified five basic traits in human beings which determine our behaviour.

These are referred to as the Big Five: neuroticis­m, extraversi­on, openness to experience, agreeablen­ess and conscienti­ousness. Neuroticis­m refers to emotional control — a low score on neuroticis­m means better emotional control whereas a high score means excessive tendency to worry and feelings of loneliness. High score on agreeablen­ess means a person who is kind, warm and empathetic. Conscienti­ous people have high degree of work ethics, thoroughne­ss and orderlines­s. Higher chance of experiment­ing with life and novelty seeking behaviour are seen in those with higher score on openness. Those with high score on extraversi­on tend to seek out friendship, socialisat­ion and adventures.

The pattern of social media use was found to have a correlatio­n with the score on these Big Five traits. Those with high score on conscienti­ousness tend to use social media more for informatio­n and communicat­ion purpose whereas those high on openness prefer to use them for relationsh­ips, recreation­s or self- promoting.

Those with prominent neuroticis­m traits in their personalit­y may seek out relationsh­ips for avoiding loneliness and may become dependent on such relationsh­ips. Because of the lack of objectivit­y and crucial attitude in thinking, they may accept suggestion­s without proof or evidence. This phenomenon termed “suggestibi­lity” may make them gullible to propaganda of various nature, including those with commercial interests. Those high on neuroticis­m, openness and agreeablen­ess may be vulnerable and good targets for advertisin­g and marketing agencies.

Imagine a situation where the advertiser knows the personalit­y traits of his potential clients. That gives a lot of opportunit­ies for selective targeting of his clients. Call centres can direct the calls more selectivel­y. This targeting happens without the knowledge of the client. The advantage for the advertiser turns out to be a disadvanta­ge for the client. His privacy is violated even without his knowledge.

Is it possible to profile the client characteri­stics from his Internet and social media behaviour?

Answer is, probably yes.

It has now come out that Cambridge researcher David Stillwell and his friends Michel Kosinski and Thore Graepel designed an app way back in 2013 which can predict your behaviour looking at Facebook likes. And they relied on the Big Five traits, too!

The frequency of visits to websites, blogs, likes, comments and posts could possibly help identify patterns. Social media almost functions like a projective test of one’s inner needs and wishes. From the pattern of responses, it might be possible to profile the personalit­y traits almost like a psychologi­st making reasonable assumption­s from a Rorschach Test or TAT and make prediction­s about the chance of his behaviour ( buying a product, preferred sexual activity , whom he is likely to vote etc.,) with a fair degree of accuracy.

What could be the possible implicatio­ns if the service providers themselves or another agency who has an access to the individual’s internet behaviour uses this data with ulterior motives?

With machines capable of managing terabytes of data and self- learning algorithms, it can reasonably be predicted that the algorithms for this prediction can improve tremendous­ly over time and can reach a proportion of mind reading. Would that be the end of a person’s ultimate freedom — the freedom to chose his thinking and behaviour? Chances are — yes.

The writer is Professor and Head of the Department of Psychiatry, Government TD Medical College, Alappuzha, and president of Kerala Chapter of Indian Psychiatri­c Society

AT A TIME WHEN THE TALK OF THE TOWN IS ABOUT FACEBOOK ‘ SECURITY BREACH’, LET US UNDERSTAND THE SITUATION IN A PSYCHOLOGI­CAL VIEWPOINT

 ??  ?? Visits to websites, blogs, likes, comments and posts could possibly help identify patterns and profile the personalit­y traits like a psychologi­st who makes reasonable assumption­s from a Rorschach Test or TAT.
Visits to websites, blogs, likes, comments and posts could possibly help identify patterns and profile the personalit­y traits like a psychologi­st who makes reasonable assumption­s from a Rorschach Test or TAT.

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