Social Media as a Passive Sensor in Longitudinal Studies of Human Behavior and Wellbeing

Social media serves as a platform to share thoughts and connect with others. The ubiquitous use of social media also enables researchers to study human behavior as the data can be collected in an inexpensive and unobtrusive way. Not only does social media provide a passive means to collect historical data at scale, it also functions as a "verbal" sensor, providing rich signals about an individual's social ecological context. This case study introduces an infrastructural framework to illustrate the feasibility of passively collecting social media data at scale in the context of an ongoing multimodal sensing study of workplace performance (N=757). We study our dataset in its relationship with demographic, personality, and wellbeing attributes of individuals. Importantly, as a means to study selection bias, we examine what characterizes individuals who choose to consent to social media data sharing vs. those who do not. Our work provides practical experiences and implications for research in the HCI field who seek to conduct similar longitudinal studies that harness the potential of social media data.

[1]  Rui Wang,et al.  Using Smartphones to Collect Behavioral Data in Psychological Science , 2016, Perspectives on psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

[2]  Etienne G. Krug,et al.  Violence: a global public health problem , 2006 .

[3]  Eric Horvitz,et al.  Predicting Depression via Social Media , 2013, ICWSM.

[4]  H. Woods,et al.  #Sleepyteens: Social media use in adolescence is associated with poor sleep quality, anxiety, depression and low self-esteem. , 2016, Journal of adolescence.

[5]  Ralph Catalano,et al.  Health, Behavior and the Community: An Ecological Perspective , 1978 .

[6]  Nitesh V. Chawla,et al.  The Tesserae Project: Large-Scale, Longitudinal, In Situ, Multimodal Sensing of Information Workers , 2019, CHI Extended Abstracts.

[7]  Gregory D. Abowd,et al.  Inferring Mood Instability on Social Media by Leveraging Ecological Momentary Assessments , 2017, Proc. ACM Interact. Mob. Wearable Ubiquitous Technol..

[8]  Margaret L. Kern,et al.  Personality, Gender, and Age in the Language of Social Media: The Open-Vocabulary Approach , 2013, PloS one.

[9]  Munmun De Choudhury,et al.  Modeling Stress with Social Media Around Incidents of Gun Violence on College Campuses , 2017, Proc. ACM Hum. Comput. Interact..

[10]  M. Larsen,et al.  The Psychology of Survey Response , 2002 .

[11]  James Fogarty,et al.  Examining Unlock Journaling with Diaries and Reminders for In Situ Self-Report in Health and Wellness , 2016, CHI.

[12]  Fanglin Chen,et al.  StudentLife: assessing mental health, academic performance and behavioral trends of college students using smartphones , 2014, UbiComp.