Anthropic's Latest Report Reveals Global Workers' Patterns: Seeking Sleep at 5 AM, Asking for Recipes at 6 PM
A new report from Anthropic analyzes millions of hourly user interactions with Claude AI, revealing detailed patterns in daily life and work. The data shows distinct rhythms: people most frequently ask about sleep help around 5 AM, seek news at 7 AM, and search for dinner recipes at 6 PM—the day's single largest query spike.
Usage sharply diverges between weekdays and weekends. Workdays are dominated by professional tasks like business emails and coding (backend, APIs). Weekends see a surge in personal use—nearly 50% of conversations—focused on emotional support, creative writing (especially fan fiction), medical advice, and side projects like AI agent design or game development. Weekend "entrepreneurial" queries peak globally, while job-hunting activity drops.
The report introduces "artifact" analysis, finding 93% of conversations produce a tangible output (explanation, document, code, etc.). Blog posts are 81% work-related, while creative writing is over 80% personal. High-wage professionals (e.g., marketing managers, programmers) use Claude more intensively outside work hours, with longer conversations, more tokens consumed, and greater use of deep thinking features compared to lower-wage roles.
Interestingly, Claude's responses typically register at a higher reading level than user prompts (by about one educational year on average), except for audience-focused writing like emails or blogs where the gap nearly disappears. The data also captures specific cultural moments, like an 8x spike in tax-related queries on the U.S. filing deadline.
Precise hourly data transforms fragmented queries into a collective diary of modern life—mapping not just economic activity, but also cycles of anxiety, creativity, and daily rhythm, with AI acting as both a productivity tool and an intimate, always-available confidant.
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