Multi-Modal Data Collection for Measuring Health, Behavior, and Living Environment of Large-Scale Participant Cohorts: Conceptual Framework and Findings from Deployments
Congyu Wu, Hagen Fritz, Zoltan Nagy, Juan P. Maestre, Edison Thomaz,, Christine Julien, Darla M. Castelli, Kaya de Barbaro, Gabriella M. Harari, R., Cameron Craddock, Kerry A. Kinney, Samuel D. Gosling, and David M. Schnyer

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive framework and large-scale deployment of multi-modal sensing to measure health, behavior, and environment, addressing previous limitations in cohort size and environmental data integration.
Contribution
It introduces a conceptual framework for organizing human-centric data modalities and reports on a large cohort study combining mobile and environmental sensing technologies.
Findings
Collected data from up to 1584 participants over 3 weeks
Developed a sensor kit for indoor air quality monitoring
Provided insights into the relationships between sensing signals and human outcomes
Abstract
As mobile technologies become ever more sensor-rich, portable, and ubiquitous, data captured by smart devices are lending rich insights into users' daily lives with unprecedented comprehensiveness, unobtrusiveness, and ecological validity. A number of human-subject studies have been conducted in the past decade to examine the use of mobile sensing to uncover individual behavioral patterns and health outcomes. While understanding health and behavior is the focus for most of these studies, we find that minimal attention has been placed on measuring personal environments, especially together with other human-centric data modalities. Moreover, the participant cohort size in most existing studies falls well below a few hundred, leaving questions open about the reliability of findings on the relations between mobile sensing signals and human outcomes. To address these limitations, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBehavioral Health and Interventions · Mental Health Research Topics · Innovative Human-Technology Interaction
