The 5 Senses on Twitter

Like most folks in the office, I’ve joined the Twitter bandwagon. I find it’s an easy way to keep in touch with folks I don’t see on a regular basis. And learn new things about those a I do see.

Graph of the 5 senses on TwitterJust now I checked out Twist, a site that lets you chart how much folks are twittering about a topic and plots them against each other, over time. It’s a neat way to see how topics ebb and flow.  I thought it would be neat to see how much the five senses are talked about on Twitter.

I think it’s fascinating that folks Twitter the most about things they see so much more than any other sense. I would have thought that smell would have ranked higher. I wonder if it’s because we are used to sharing things we saw with our cell phone cameras. Or if it’s just part of human storytelling. “You’ll never believe what I saw on the way home today…”

There are 5 comments on this idea.

Most people Tweet in the past tense though… so if you look up “saw” and “heard” you’ll find it’s much closer than “see” and “hear.” :-) But “smelled” is no where there at all.

[...] adaptive path » blog » Chiara Fox » The 5 Senses on Twitter Just now I checked out Twist, a site that lets you chart how much folks are twittering about a topic and plots them against each other, over time. (tags: twitter twist)     This entry was written by delicious and posted on at 3:42 am and filed under delicious. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.     These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. [...]

[...] discovered Adaptive Path’s blog, which has some really good stuff. Chiara Fox wrote a post on The 5 Senses on Twitter, and discovered (through Twist) that it’s sight that is reported more often than the other [...]

There is a new version of twist out, that has a cleaner interface, shows more data and gives tweets about the topics in the graph in the same page, so you can actually see what people are saying when they mention a topic. Its a simple tool, but useful, and a lot of fun to use.

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