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Show HN: MoodTrack, a simple iPhone app to track your moods and thoughts

43 pointsby Harjalmost 13 years ago
I've often wondered whether there are any patterns or cycles to my moods so I built a simple iPhone app that occasionally pings me to ask how I'm feeling on a scale of 1 - 10. I also note down what I'm thinking or doing at that moment and automatically grab my location. I use the data to show some basic statistics on how I've been feeling on average over the past three days, past week and since I started tracking. There's also a graph of my moods over time.<p>I'd love to get feedback on whether people would find something like this useful. I'm curious about what other things people would want to track about themselves and interesting things to do with the data.<p>http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/moodtrack/id541505268?mt=8

15 comments

rjbalmost 13 years ago
I have been wanting an app that does this for a VERY long time. Ever since reading Letters From a Stoic and The Happiness Hypothesis, my life's resolution has been to be happier than I was yesterday.<p>I, similar to codegeek, always envisioned something simpler. Just three emoticons:<p>:( :| :)<p>Numbers may be more accurate, more quantitative, or what have you, but I think this is about being honest with yourself and not allowing yourself off the hook, "well, at least today was an 8". No. I want every day to be a 10!<p>Personally, I think trying to account for every emotion or mood possible would defeat the goal.
rajualmost 13 years ago
Looks good. Simple, and to the point. I would love to use it, but just a few points<p>1. The website link on iTunes is not up (<a href="http://www.moodtrack.co/" rel="nofollow">http://www.moodtrack.co/</a>)<p>2. Is there a way for me to export the data out? Every other app that I use consistently lets me do this (A good example is Dayta that exports a CSV file) and it's absolutely essential for me to do it.<p>Good job. Hopefully you can answer the above two questions for me.<p>Thanks.<p>P.S - I already installed it, but I probably will just play with it till I know I can get my data out.
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aaronpkalmost 13 years ago
I would really love to use an app like this. The problem I have with most things like this is that I have a hard time judging my mood on a 1-10 scale. How do I know what a 7 vs and 8 means? And how do I make sure I evaluate my mood on the the same scale day after day?<p>I would love to see a version of this with fewer choices for moods. Even just three options like :( and :| and :) would be enough. At least then I would know I'm getting more consistent measurements.
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laurenproctoralmost 13 years ago
This is great, thanks for sharing. I've tried using daytum and askmeevery.com to achieve similar QS tracking, but for some reason neither really resonated.<p>I think you've really hit on something with the push notifications. AskMeEvery uses scheduling along with SMS and email to achieve something similar, but ultimately their tracking wasn't as robust as I would have liked.<p>I agree with dchuk in that the real power here has to do with your ability to turn raw data into true insights on trends and what affects a person's mood.<p>I saw you plan to make the data available to users over time. When you do so, it might be cool to also add some kind of data analysis forum or outlet where users can share the tools they've created to analyze their moods over time.<p>I'd also love to create custom categories or fields that I can check off so that when the app pings me, I answer something like Overall Mood: ____ Food:_____ Idea: ____ or something to that effect. This could also work with the tagging feature someone mentioned.<p>Thanks again for the share. I'm looking forward to getting my first ping and putting this app to work.
aaronbrethorstalmost 13 years ago
A couple notes from a friend of mine who tried it out:<p>* Let me track answers to these questions: How was your sleep last night? Quality and number of hours.<p>* Optional, user-configurable yes/no questions. For example, let me set up "did you take your meds?", "did you exercise?", "did you eat gluten/dairy/etc. in the last 24 hours?"<p>* The workflow around adding a note is not super-clear right now.<p>* you should be able to delete accidental entries<p>thanks!
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dchukalmost 13 years ago
this is wonderful, thanks for publishing this. I have a plan to launch something somewhat similar to this one day and will test it on myself (as I deal with severe depression) to see if it really does help things in the long run.<p>Here's a few suggestions from my list of things I want to add to my idea:<p>-Allow me to add tags to my mood checkin. Over time, patterns will emerge for both positive and negative mindsets (hopefully)<p>-make the checkins randomly spaced out throughout the day so people don't just start ignoring the app after a while<p>-try and extrapolate some compound meaning from the data, something like "it seems when you don't get a lot of sleep then see this person, your mood drops"...can be tricky to do, but could really add to the long term value.<p>Good luck!
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kyle_martin1almost 13 years ago
I also thought about writing an app like this a while back. Having the user describe their mood with colors would also be a good way of describing mood. Perhaps look into how psychologists evaluate moods and mood disorders. I'll download it and good luck!
ColinHayhurstalmost 13 years ago
Plenty of others working on this problem. These spring to mind as I've met founders: <a href="http://www.moodscope.com/login" rel="nofollow">http://www.moodscope.com/login</a> <a href="http://www.umotif.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.umotif.com/</a> <a href="http://moodpanda.com/" rel="nofollow">http://moodpanda.com/</a><p>I've also used mappiness (mentioned below) and found that the best. But after 6 weeks I was not learning anything new so stopped using it. This is a common experience for people using these apps: As I've heard it at London QS meetups (I'm a founding member).<p>Still awaiting an app that nails it. I'm giving it whirl. Good luck!
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lewisgodowskialmost 13 years ago
I've been interested in tracking my moods lately, so this is perfect timing. I agree that I would find emoticons easier to use than a 1-10 scale. The way it currently is, I find myself thinking too much about what each number means, which in turn gets me thinking too much about my mood. I feel like this app needs to be very "shallow" (for lack of a better word...?). It needs to be engaging/personal enough to get people to answer truthfully/accurately, but not so engaging that it causes users over think their mood. Just my $.02. Look forward to testing this one out! (:
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unohooalmost 13 years ago
One of my friends built this: <a href="http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mooed/id522311224?mt=8" rel="nofollow">http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mooed/id522311224?mt=8</a><p>provides you with different types of moods - related to anger, excitement, happiness etc. You can post the moods to Facebook as well as send your 'mooed' via sms to friends. Its actually pretty cool
codegeekalmost 13 years ago
Instead of having a scale of 1-10, why not use expressions like happy, confused, sad, angry, excited, dull, bored etc ?
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pknightalmost 13 years ago
Sounds very much like the experience sampling method used by Cszikszentmihalyi who has worked on research into flow <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experience_sampling_method" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experience_sampling_method</a>
revoradalmost 13 years ago
I used to track my mood using Google calendar email alerts and posterous. But I gave up because it was too cumbersome.<p>This looks nice and easy. And for a change, I actually said yes to push notifications!
Dochesalmost 13 years ago
Feels like a stripped-down version of [Mappiness](<a href="http://www.mappiness.org.uk/" rel="nofollow">http://www.mappiness.org.uk/</a>) -- which isn't a bad thing, really.
micheleharperalmost 13 years ago
wow...I am so happy to read all of these comments! I just published Mood Pulse <a href="https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=moodpulse.com" rel="nofollow">https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=moodpulse.com</a> and I am thinking about taking the three moods (happy, just ok, sad) to nine choices. reading all of your comments makes me wonder if this is a good move considering that my initial goal was to have a very simple app to record the user's mood over time.