***Apologies for cross-posting***
Dear colleagues,
We would like to invite you to submit papers to our session on Passive
Smartphone Data Collection and Additional Tasks in Mobile Web
Surveys: Willingness, Non-participation, Consent, and Ethics
at the ESRA Conference (July 15-19, 2019 in Zagreb).
You can submit your abstract using the conference website:
https://www.europeansurveyresearch.org/conferences/register
The closing date for the submission of abstracts is November
18, 2018.
Here is the abstract for our session:
Passive Smartphone Data Collection and Additional Tasks in
Mobile Web Surveys: Willingness, Non-participation, Consent, and
Ethics
Smartphones allow researchers to collect data through sensors
such as GPS and accelerometers to study movement and passively
collect data such as browsing history and app usage in addition to
self-reports. Passive mobile data collection allows researchers to
broaden the scope of the research questions that can be answered
and can potentially decrease measurement errors and reduce
respondent burden. However, there are issues of selectivity,
representativeness, and ethics of collecting such data.
Respondents have to be willing to provide access to sensor data or
perform additional tasks such as downloading apps, taking
pictures, and providing access to their smartphone's data. If
respondents who are willing to engage in these tasks differ from
nonwilling smartphone users, results based on passively collected
data might be biased. Moreover, little to date is known about how
to ask for informed consent in passive data collection studies. In
this session, we aim to bring together empirical evidence on the
state-of-the-art use of sensor measurement and other additional
tasks on smartphones in combination with mobile web surveys. We
welcome presentations of results from (large-scale) studies with
diverse sensors and tasks from multiple countries and research
settings. Possible topics can include:
- current practice in collecting passive / smartphone sensor data
- implementation, wording, and placement of consent questions
- willingness to allow smartphone sensor measurements
- willingness to perform additional tasks using smartphones
- nonparticipation bias in studies using smartphone sensor
measurements
- ethical issues and privacy concerns when collecting passive data
Looking forward to seeing you at the ESRA conference,
Florian Keusch and Bella Struminskaya
--
Florian Keusch
Assistant Professor of Statistics and Methodology
University of Mannheim
A5, 6 (Entrance C)
Room C213, 2nd floor
68159 Mannheim, Germany
+49 (0)621 - 181 3214
f.keusch@uni-mannheim.de
floriankeusch.weebly.com
-- Florian Keusch Assistant Professor of Statistics and Methodology University of Mannheim A5, 6 (Entrance C) Room C213, 2nd floor 68159 Mannheim, Germany +49 (0)621 - 181 3214 f.keusch@uni-mannheim.de floriankeusch.weebly.com