Socio-Technical Network Analysis from Wearable Interactions

Katayoun Farrahi, Remi Emonet, Alois Ferscha

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference proceedingspeer-review

Abstract

Wearable sensing platforms like modern smartphones have proven to be effective means in the complexity and computational social sciences. This paper draws from explicit (phone calls, SMS messaging) and implicit (proximity sensing based on Bluetooth radio signals) interaction patterns collected via smartphones and reality mining techniques to explain the dynamics of personal interactions and relationships. We consider three real human to human interaction networks, namely physical proximity, phone communication and instant messaging. We analyze a real undergraduate community's social circles and consider various topologies, such as the interaction patterns of users with the entire community, and the interaction patterns of users within their own community. We fit distributions of various interactions, for example, showing that the distribution of users that have been in physical proximity but have never communicated by phone fits a gaussian. Finally, we consider five types of relationships, for example friendships, to see whether significant differences exist in their interaction patterns. We find statistically significant differences in the physical proximity patterns of people who are mutual friends and people who are non-mutual (or asymmetric) friends, though this difference does not exist between mutual friends and never friends, nor does it exist in their phone communication patterns. Our findings impact a wide range of data-driven applications in socio-technical systems by providing
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationInternational Symposium on Wearable Computers (ISWC)
Number of pages8
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2012

Fields of science

  • 102 Computer Sciences
  • 102009 Computer simulation
  • 102013 Human-computer interaction
  • 102019 Machine learning
  • 102020 Medical informatics
  • 102021 Pervasive computing
  • 102022 Software development
  • 102025 Distributed systems
  • 202017 Embedded systems
  • 211902 Assistive technologies
  • 211912 Product design

JKU Focus areas

  • Computation in Informatics and Mathematics
  • Engineering and Natural Sciences (in general)

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