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When You Fall Out of Love, This Is What Facebook Sees

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How does the end of a real-life relationship change our enduring relationship with social networks? What can be done to make real-life breakups less debilitating? How can we make them harder, if we're into that sort of thing for artistic suffering or whatever, not that I am?

 A colossal spike in Facebook interactions on the day of the breakup, followed by higher use (Facebook)

Since almost 20 percent of the world population, more than 1.3 billion humans, is active on Facebook every month, the Facebook Data Science team stands to tell us a lot about how we livin' and what to do to cope in "the digital age." Just like how Google thinks it can predict flu outbreaks, Facebook's stockpiles of activity logs are becoming a serious player in the epidemiology of behavioral pathology.

The Facebook team reviewed data from "people who were on the receiving end of a separation" and looked at how their Facebook activity changed before and after said separation.

(Interestingly, the Facebook Data Science Team defines being on the receiving end of a separation as "people who had been in a relationship for at least four weeks with someone who then switched their relationship status to 'Single.'" Because no one is so monstrous as to be on the giving(?) end of a separation and then be the first to change their status to Single.)

By "in a relationship," they do mean a status that said literally "In a relationship," as well as one that indicated engagement, marriage, domestic partnership, civil unions, and the like. The Facebook team measured how many messages these people sent and received, how many timeline posts they posted themselves or had thrust upon them, and the number of comments those posts got.

"We observed a steady regime around the baseline before the day the relationship status changes," the Facebook Data Science team wrote on their blog (a Facebook page) on Saturday, "followed by a discontinuity on that day with a more than 225 percent increase of the average volume of interactions."

"This points towards people receiving support their friends in times where they need it," they conclude, "whether it comes in the form of private messages, timeline posts or comments."

Or it points towards people withdrawing into an unnaturally curated social network for low-risk validation as a replacement for real human connection. However you want to say it. People can be unpredictable, irrational, and unavailable. A social network will never break up with you.

Anticipating this sort of increased Facebook useage after a breakup, the dating site eHarmony recently gave some advice in the form of "Ten Things to Not Post on Facebook After a Breakup." They include not posting sappy songs or slander or cryptic allusions to your fragile emotional state (though, those would get lots of comments and subsequent messages, right, Facebook Data Science?), not posting photos of you and your ex together (Dear lord!), and not posting photos of you with someone attractive in order to inspire jealousy (Okay that's a good one). What are you supposed to post then? Quirky Atlantic articles about the science of Facebook and relationships?


    







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