Track Your Happiness 12+

Matt Killingsworth

Designed for iPhone

    • 3.2 • 69 Ratings
    • Free

iPhone Screenshots

Description

Track Your Happiness is a scientific research project that investigates what makes life worth living.

Using this app, you’ll be able to track your happiness and find out what factors — for you personally — are associated with greater happiness. You’ll also contribute to our scientific understanding of happiness.

Thinkers from Aristotle to William James have argued that happiness is a core goal of life. Paradoxically, enormous improvements in the conditions human life — bigger houses, more powerful technology, better medical care — have achieved only modest improvements in happiness.

Track Your Happiness aims to use the latest in science and technology to help you better understand the causes of your own happiness, while also contributing to scientific research that could one day benefit everyone.

A few times a day, you’ll get a notification and be asked some questions about your experience at that moment. The idea is that by measuring your experience at many individual moments, you’ll get an accurate picture of your life and the determinants of your happiness.

Let’s get started tracking your happiness!

What’s New

Version 0.13.5

This app has been updated by Apple to display the Apple Watch app icon.

• Easier to reach surveys for less phone-dropping survey-taking.
• Continued bug fixes.

Ratings and Reviews

3.2 out of 5
69 Ratings

69 Ratings

Hurricane_Dane ,

Couple problems

I like the his app, or I should say I like the idea of it. There are some inherent problems, however.

First: the app keeps kicking me out, and especially when I’m doing other things, I don’t want to have to take the time to log in, remember which username/password I used, etc.

Second: if I’m more unhappy/depressed, I’m much less likely to bother spending the time it takes to complete a short survey than if I’m feeling good. I’m sure I’m not the only person who experiences this and it automatically creates a user bias toward a higher average happiness.

When I was severely depressed/suicidal, I didn’t even bother opening the app. Now that I’m doing better, it feels like a lot of effort to log in every time so I just ignore all the notifications that pop up.

There were some other things I thought could be useful, like weekly or monthly tracking of specific markers of happiness, e.g.: family/career satisfaction, financial stability, interactions with friends, activities engaged in, etc. as well as things that might be correlated with happiness, such as alcohol consumption/drug use.

TaraMiskey ,

Great method

Heard about this project through the TED Radio Hour podcast. I think it's a really great start to pinpointing what drives our happiness. I love that it is randomized, convenient, and likely reliable (as a "self improvement" tool, respondents are probably much less likely to answer dishonestly). The only addition I'd like to see is questions about the quality of human interaction, similar to the "productivity" question. For instance, if you recently got in a fight with your spouse, your low happiness score wouldn't be related to the fact that you're with someone, but more specifically related to the fact that you're with someone who you're upset with. The downside to this is it runs the risk of making the surveys too detailed and extensive, but personally, I think my level of happiness is closely related to the quality and status of my relationships. This is a great app though, and I'm really enjoying being a part of it.

missusjenns ,

Pretty awesome--for the average working adult

I learnt about this app in my psych class; it's a pretty awesome app! It's especially fun to see the correlations between activity and mood become clearer as time goes on and you use the app longer.
One suggestion I'd like to make is to make the question choices more accessible to a variety of people--which is to say, I'm a college student and I find that some questions (esp. the "where are you"? question) are difficult to answer (if I'm at the dining hall, am I at a restaurant? At home? At work? etc.). I'm aware that if you're doing a case study, it's easier to collapse these demographics across the board, but the lives of college students are pretty radically different from adulthood and that might be a confounding factor. Otherwise, I'm having a lot of fun with this app on a micro, personal scale! :)

App Privacy

The developer, Matt Killingsworth, has not provided details about its privacy practices and handling of data to Apple. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

No Details Provided

The developer will be required to provide privacy details when they submit their next app update.

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