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      Social Informatics 

      Twitter Session Analytics: Profiling Users’ Short-Term Behavioral Changes

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      Springer International Publishing

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          Diurnal and seasonal mood vary with work, sleep, and daylength across diverse cultures.

          We identified individual-level diurnal and seasonal mood rhythms in cultures across the globe, using data from millions of public Twitter messages. We found that individuals awaken in a good mood that deteriorates as the day progresses--which is consistent with the effects of sleep and circadian rhythm--and that seasonal change in baseline positive affect varies with change in daylength. People are happier on weekends, but the morning peak in positive affect is delayed by 2 hours, which suggests that people awaken later on weekends.
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            The morning morality effect: the influence of time of day on unethical behavior.

            Are people more moral in the morning than in the afternoon? We propose that the normal, unremarkable experiences associated with everyday living can deplete one's capacity to resist moral temptations. In a series of four experiments, both undergraduate students and a sample of U.S. adults engaged in less unethical behavior (e.g., less lying and cheating) on tasks performed in the morning than on the same tasks performed in the afternoon. This morning morality effect was mediated by decreases in moral awareness and self-control in the afternoon. Furthermore, the effect of time of day on unethical behavior was found to be stronger for people with a lower propensity to morally disengage. These findings highlight a simple yet pervasive factor (i.e., the time of day) that has important implications for moral behavior.
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              Free will in consumer behavior: Self-control, ego depletion, and choice

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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                2016
                October 19 2016
                : 71-86
                10.1007/978-3-319-47874-6_6
                e9335e34-03a8-4dc8-87c5-fbc41f95e989

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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