Experience sampling mit Wearables: Eine open-source Lösung
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We all know diaries. They are used to record, capture, and monitor our everyday experiences in our own words and are habitually kept on a daily basis. But diaries are also used in science in order to systematically assess life experiences, mostly in a structured form (closed questions) referring to a specific topic (e.g., well-being). Participants may not just answer questions at the end of the day, but also at any time during the day (so-called event- and time-based sampling). In the past, these scientific diaries were used in printed form. However, due to technical progress, nowadays diaries are also digital, and come in new forms and shapes such as Personal Digital Assistants (also known as PDAs) and smartphones. An even more recent development offers further potential as a technological platform for diary studies wearables. Currently, wearables are predominantly used in sports to measure heart rate and blood pressure, as a pedometer, or to determine the exact GPS position. Meanwhile, the potential to use wearables for scientific purposes, e.g., data collection in diary studies seems substantial. Wearables offer various major advantages, such as being unobtrusive (important for the direct measurement of sensitive topics), not disturbing our daily routines (important for very frequent daily measurements), and being capable of running autonomously (i.e., independent from smartphones and Internet connections). This being said, the present project sets out to develop an open-source software for scientific purposes which should be easily adaptable (e.g., through further sensors, buttons) and work autonomously while implementing low power consumption and the option to store data locally altogether based on a freely available development board (mbientlab). Driven by these key objectives and goals, several prototypes have already been developed which shall now be finalized. The practicability and applicability of software and wearable as well as the validity of the collected data shall be analysed in an empirical study on laughter in everyday life.
| Title | Year(s) | DOI / Link |
|---|---|---|
| Laughter in everyday life: an event-based experience sampling method study using wrist-worn wearablesFrontiers in Psychology | 2024 | 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1296955 |
| Development of an open-source solution to facilitate the use of one-button wearables in experience sampling designs |
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Research Fields
| 2024 |
| 10.3758/s13428-023-02322-y |