Are You Angry? Researchers Measure Emotion with Your Mouse Clicks

Feeling negative emotions alters natural cursor movement

Written byBrigham Young University
| 2 min read
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Most people can tell if you’re angry based on the way you’re acting. Professor Jeffrey Jenkins can tell if you’re angry by the way you move a computer mouse.

The Brigham Young University (BYU) information systems expert says people experiencing anger (and other negative emotions—frustration, confusion, sadness) become less precise in their mouse movements and move the cursor at different speeds.

Related article: Emotion Detectors Could Make Driving Safer

Thanks to advances in modern technology, Jenkins can now gather and process enough data points from your cursor movement to measure those deviations and indicate your emotional state.

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