Recovering Individual Emotional States from Sparse Ratings Using Collaborative Filtering

Eshin Jolly, Max Farrens, Nathan Greenstein, Hedwig Eisenbarth, Marianne C. Reddan, Eric Andrews, Tor D. Wager, Luke J. Chang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

A fundamental challenge in emotion research is measuring feeling states with high granularity and temporal precision without disrupting the emotion generation process. Here we introduce and validate a new approach in which responses are sparsely sampled and the missing data are recovered using a computational technique known as collaborative filtering (CF). This approach leverages structured covariation across individual experiences and is available in Neighbors, an open-source Python toolbox. We validate our approach across three different experimental contexts by recovering dense individual ratings using only a small subset of the original data. In dataset 1, participants (n=316) separately rated 112 emotional images on 6 different discrete emotions. In dataset 2, participants (n=203) watched 8 short emotionally engaging autobiographical stories while simultaneously providing moment-by-moment ratings of the intensity of their affective experience. In dataset 3, participants (n=60) with distinct social preferences made 76 decisions about how much money to return in a hidden multiplier trust game. Across all experimental contexts, CF was able to accurately recover missing data and importantly outperformed mean and multivariate imputation, particularly in contexts with greater individual variability. This approach will enable new avenues for affective science research by allowing researchers to acquire high dimensional ratings from emotional experiences with minimal disruption to the emotion-generation process.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)799-817
Number of pages19
JournalAffective Science
Volume3
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Affect
  • Collaborative filtering
  • Emotion
  • Modeling
  • Prediction

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Behavioral Neuroscience
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
  • Social Psychology

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