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Programme for the second MASS Workshop
We are very excited to host prof. Helen Nissenbaum as keynote speaker at the second keynote speaker. prof. Nissenbaum. She is a Professor at Cornell Tech and in the Information Science Department at Cornell University. Her research takes an ethical perspectives on policy, law, science, and engineering relating to information technology, computing, digital media and data science. Topics have included privacy, trust, accountability, security, and values in technology design. These are all topics directly relevant to using research app for social research.
The provisional programme of the workshop follows below:
SCHEDULE
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MASS WORKSHOP | Utrecht. 23-24 April 2020 | ||
Thursdsay | Day1 – 23 april | Main presenter |
Presentation title: | |
08:30-09:00 | Registration with coffee and tea | |||
09:00-09:15 | opening | |||
09:15-10:00 | Keynote 1 | Nissenbaum | ||
10:00-10:20 | break | |||
10:20-11:20 | Session A: Possibilities and limitations of Apps | Haas |
Combining smartphone sensor and survey data to evaluate the relationship between smartphone usage and levels of exhaustion
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Kapteyn | Does Feedback from Activity Trackers influence Physical Activity? Evidence from a Randomized Controlled Trial | |||
Antoun | Patterns of non-adherence in sensor measurement | |||
11:20-11:50 | break | |||
11:50-13:00 | Session B: willingness and participation in smartphone app studies | Struminskaya |
The role of technological skills and privacy concerns in willingness to share smartphone sensor data
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Richter | Effects of mobile assessment designs on participation and compliance: Experimental and meta-analytic evidence | |||
Elevelt | Consent to data linkage: a meta-analysis | |||
13:00-14:00 | lunch | |||
14:00-15:10 | Session C: Location data | Trappmann | Using geofences to trigger surveys: Lessons learned from the IAB-SMART app | |
Slim | Combining smartphone based application MobilityLog and quantitative interviews to study spatio-temporal behaviour and social networks | |||
Schmidt | the RMove app to study travel behavior | |||
15:10-15:40 | break | |||
15:40-16:50 | Session D: interactions and voice | Gavras | New Avenues in Survey Data Collection: Comparing the Quality of Text and Voice Answers to Political Attitude Questions in Smartphone Surveys | |
Junghaenel | Linguistic sampling of social interactions: Pilot testing of a mobile approach to study people’s word use. | |||
Bahr | Measuring online and offline social networks with a mobile app | |||
16:50-17:00 | closing of day 1 | |||
Friday | 24 April | Main presenter | Title | |
09:00-10:10 | Session E: designing and testing mobile apps | Giesen | How to design pre-tests for data collection apps? First experiences at Statistics Netherlands. | |
Walton | Improving the User Experience of mobile apps | |||
10:10-11:20 | Session F: measuring the respondent’s environment | de Vries | The Ecological Momentary Assessment of Well-being | |
Dey |
Modelling of intensive longitudinal mixed type data with Semiparametric Gaussian Copula and its application to real-time mobile monitoring of daily health behaviours
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Bosch | A new experiment on the use of images to answer online web survey questions | |||
11:20-11:50 | break | |||
11:50-13:00 | Session G: activity trackers | Toepoel | Distributing activity trackers to investigate health behavior: response rates, data quality, and the role of incentives | |
Luiten | Comparing activity trackers to investigate health behavior: balancing quality, costs and usability | |||
Mulder | Tell me what I like to do: The predictive power of Personality on Physical Activity preferences. | |||
13:00-14:00 | lunch | |||
14:00-15:10 | Session H: apps as a replacement for surveys | de wolf | A shop receipt scanning and classification pipeline | |
Roberts | Can a smartphone app be used to survey the general population: Comparing an app- and a browser-based web survey design | |||
Uman | A smart sensor system for measuring labour conditions | |||
15:10-15:40 | break | |||
15:40-17:00 | Wrap-up and looking forward: |