Smartphone Sensing for the Well-being of Young Adults: A Review
Lakmal Meegahapola, Daniel Gatica-Perez

TL;DR
This review paper examines how smartphone sensors are used to monitor and promote the well-being of young adults, proposing taxonomies and highlighting future research directions in the field.
Contribution
It introduces structured taxonomies for analyzing smartphone sensing studies on young adults' well-being and emphasizes diversity-awareness in this research area.
Findings
Proposes taxonomies based on human science literature for study classification
Highlights the importance of diversity-awareness in smartphone sensing research
Provides insights and future directions for researchers in the field
Abstract
Over the years, mobile phones have become versatile devices with a multitude of capabilities due to the plethora of embedded sensors that enable them to capture rich data unobtrusively. In a world where people are more conscious regarding their health and well-being, the pervasiveness of smartphones has enabled researchers to build apps that assist people to live healthier lifestyles, and to diagnose and monitor various health conditions. Motivated by the high smartphone coverage among young adults and the unique issues they face, in this review paper, we focus on studies that have used smartphone sensing for the well-being of young adults. We analyze existing work in the domain from two perspectives, namely Data Perspective and System Perspective. For both these perspectives, we propose taxonomies motivated from human science literature, which enable to identify important study areas.…
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