2019
DOI: 10.1080/09291016.2018.1558742
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Habitual daily ‘Good Morning’ message senders reveal the status of their own circadian clock

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In another research more consistent with chronobiology studies, empirical evidence has been reported on the existence of the phenomenon of social synchronization in Facebook Messenger (Diwan et al, 2020). Generally speaking, research suggests that the behavior of posting social media content can be used as a proxy measure for the endogenous circadian clock of users of social networking sites (Murnane et al, 2015;Swain and Pati, 2019). In light of the above, it seems plausible to consider that the daily posting rates of social media content in a given geographical region can be a relevant factor that can help explain variations in the spatial behavior of social media user protest supporters.…”
Section: Conceptual-analytical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…In another research more consistent with chronobiology studies, empirical evidence has been reported on the existence of the phenomenon of social synchronization in Facebook Messenger (Diwan et al, 2020). Generally speaking, research suggests that the behavior of posting social media content can be used as a proxy measure for the endogenous circadian clock of users of social networking sites (Murnane et al, 2015;Swain and Pati, 2019). In light of the above, it seems plausible to consider that the daily posting rates of social media content in a given geographical region can be a relevant factor that can help explain variations in the spatial behavior of social media user protest supporters.…”
Section: Conceptual-analytical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…For instance, in information science, time has long been recognized as a crucial contextual factor that drives human information seeking (Savolainen 2006). The study of traces recorded on digital platforms has yielded novel insights about circadian rhythms (Aledavood et al 2022;Pintér and Felde 2022;Althoff et al 2017;Murnane et al 2015;Chalmers et al 2011;Kumar Swain and Kumar Pati 2020;Leypunskiy et al 2018) and periodic fluctuations in alertness (Abdullah et al 2016), mood (Dodds et al 2011;Golder and Macy 2011), focus (Mark et al 2016), musical taste (Park et al 2019;Heggli, Stupacher, and Vuust 2021), purchase habits (Gullo et al 2019), and ad engagement (Saha et al 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%