从与社交焦虑个体的虚拟互动中检测移动感知指标的社会背景

IF 3.6 Q2 COMPUTER SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Zhiyuan Wang, Maria A. Larrazabal, Mark Rucker, Emma R. Toner, Katharine E. Daniel, Shashwat Kumar, Mehdi Boukhechba, Bethany A. Teachman, Laura E. Barnes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

移动传感是一种普遍而有用的工具,可以根据生理和行为模式推断个体的心理健康状况。除了与心理健康直接相关的感知特征外,检测社会背景的不同特征以了解随时间和不同环境的社会互动模式可能很有价值。这可以让我们深入了解不同社区的学术、工作和社交生活,以及他们的社交网络。我们认为,被动地检测社会环境对社交焦虑研究特别有用,因为它可能最终有助于识别社交焦虑状态的变化以及社交回避和退缩的模式。为此,我们招募了一组高度社交焦虑的大学生(N=46),以检验我们是否可以通过腕带传感器检测到实验操纵的虚拟社会背景的存在。使用多任务机器学习管道,我们利用被动感知的生物行为流来检测与社交焦虑相关的情境,包括(1)人们是否处于社交情境中,(2)社交群体的规模,(3)社会评价程度,以及(4)社交情境的阶段(预期、积极体验或刚刚参与体验)。结果表明,大多数虚拟社会情境检测都是可行的,在检测个体是否处于社会情境和情境的阶段时,预测准确率较高,而在检测社会评价水平时,预测准确率较低。他们还指出,根据预测的环境,感知流对预测的重要性是不同的。我们的研究结果还提供了与被动上下文检测相关的设计元素的有用信息,包括最佳感知持续时间,不同感知模式的效用以及个性化的需求。我们讨论了这些发现对未来情境检测工作的影响(例如,即时适应性干预发展)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Detecting Social Contexts from Mobile Sensing Indicators in Virtual Interactions with Socially Anxious Individuals
Mobile sensing is a ubiquitous and useful tool to make inferences about individuals' mental health based on physiology and behavior patterns. Along with sensing features directly associated with mental health, it can be valuable to detect different features of social contexts to learn about social interaction patterns over time and across different environments. This can provide insight into diverse communities' academic, work and social lives, and their social networks. We posit that passively detecting social contexts can be particularly useful for social anxiety research, as it may ultimately help identify changes in social anxiety status and patterns of social avoidance and withdrawal. To this end, we recruited a sample of highly socially anxious undergraduate students (N=46) to examine whether we could detect the presence of experimentally manipulated virtual social contexts via wristband sensors. Using a multitask machine learning pipeline, we leveraged passively sensed biobehavioral streams to detect contexts relevant to social anxiety, including (1) whether people were in a social situation, (2) size of the social group, (3) degree of social evaluation, and (4) phase of social situation (anticipating, actively experiencing, or had just participated in an experience). Results demonstrated the feasibility of detecting most virtual social contexts, with stronger predictive accuracy when detecting whether individuals were in a social situation or not and the phase of the situation, and weaker predictive accuracy when detecting the level of social evaluation. They also indicated that sensing streams are differentially important to prediction based on the context being predicted. Our findings also provide useful information regarding design elements relevant to passive context detection, including optimal sensing duration, the utility of different sensing modalities, and the need for personalization. We discuss implications of these findings for future work on context detection (e.g., just-in-time adaptive intervention development).
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来源期刊
Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies
Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies Computer Science-Computer Networks and Communications
CiteScore
9.10
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154
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