Tapping Into the App

Our understanding of emerging adults is largely based on retrospective self-reports that can be limited by poor recall, current mood, and social desirability. To address these shortcomings, Larson and Csikszentmihalyi pioneered the experience sampling method (ESM) with electronic pagers and paper–pencil surveys. The increasing ubiquity of smartphone ownership allows researchers to take ESM to the next level: developing smartphone applications programmed to alert participants, collect responses, and send data directly to a database for analysis. This article suggests types of research questions relevant to emerging adults that can be pursued using ESM. We also present a case study of the development of an Android app with 68 emerging adults, including the challenges and benefits of using this technology. Despite the challenges, we encourage researchers to consider ESM as an innovative and ecologically valid method for studying within- and between-participant variability on a variety of topics relevant to emerging adults.

[1]  D. Gilbert,et al.  A Wandering Mind Is an Unhappy Mind , 2010, Science.

[2]  Joel M. Hektner,et al.  Experience sampling method , 2007 .

[3]  T. Yip,et al.  The Application of Experience Sampling Approaches to the Study of Ethnic Identity: New Developmental Insights and Directions. , 2013, Child development perspectives.

[4]  M. Csíkszentmihályi,et al.  Validity and Reliability of the Experience‐Sampling Method , 1987, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[5]  J. Arnett Emerging Adulthood: The Winding Road from the Late Teens through the Twenties , 2004 .

[6]  Daniel J. Barrett,et al.  An Introduction to Computerized Experience Sampling in Psychology , 2001 .

[7]  M. Csíkszentmihályi,et al.  Experience Sampling Method Applications to Communication Research Questions. , 1996 .

[8]  Megan A. Moreno,et al.  Internet use and multitasking among older adolescents: An experience sampling approach , 2012, Comput. Hum. Behav..

[9]  T. Yip Sources of Situational Variation in Ethnic Identity and Psychological Well-Being: A Palm Pilot Study of Chinese American Students , 2005, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[10]  Steve Whittaker,et al.  Echoes from the past: how technology mediated reflection improves well-being , 2013, CHI.

[11]  M. Csíkszentmihályi,et al.  Experience Sampling Method: Measuring the Quality of Everyday Life , 2006 .

[12]  D. Zuroff,et al.  Depressive Styles and the Regulation of Negative Affect: A Daily Experience Study , 1999, Cognitive Therapy and Research.

[13]  David C. Rubin,et al.  Autobiographical memory across the lifespan. , 1986 .

[14]  D. McAdams,et al.  Intimacy and affiliation motives in daily living: An experience sampling analysis , 1983 .

[15]  J. Ziegler,et al.  Smart Phone, Smart Science: How the Use of Smartphones Can Revolutionize Research in Cognitive Science , 2011, PloS one.

[16]  G. Miller,et al.  Science Perspectives on Psychological the Smartphone Psychology Manifesto on Behalf Of: Association for Psychological Science the Smartphone Psychology Manifesto Previous Research Using Mobile Electronic Devices What Smartphones Can Do Now and Will Be Able to Do in the near Future , 2022 .

[17]  Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi,et al.  Experiential Correlates of Time Alone in Adolescence , 1978 .

[18]  C. B. Colby The weirdest people in the world , 1973 .

[19]  N. Ammerman Spiritual but Not Religious?: Beyond Binary Choices in the Study of Religion , 2013, Sociology of Religion.

[20]  John S. Strauss,et al.  Assessing Schizophrenia in Daily Life: The Experience Sampling Method. , 1996 .

[21]  Mark Regnerus,et al.  Losing My Religion: The Social Sources of Religious Decline in Early Adulthood , 2007 .

[22]  M. Azmitia,et al.  Finding Your Niche: Identity and Emotional Support in Emerging Adults' Adjustment to the Transition to College , 2013 .

[23]  R. Larson Beeping children and adolescents: A method for studying time use and daily experience , 1989, Journal of youth and adolescence.

[24]  S. Levinson,et al.  WEIRD languages have misled us, too , 2010, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.