Kaitlyn Burnell, Jesus A Beltran, Monika N Lind, Gillian R Hayes, Candice L Odgers
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Adolescents (aged 15-20, <i>N</i> = 131) participated in a 90-day passive sensing study, which collected data on both digital (keystroke and app usage) and offline (sleep and physical activity) behaviors. Although correlations indicated a small signal between same-day mental health indicators and several passively sensed variables (e.g., proportion of typed negative words and call behaviors), associations typically disappeared when disaggregating between- from within-person associations. Additionally, participation uptake was low, but there was little evidence of bias in participation or data coverage based on mental health risk or demographics. Results demonstrate the feasibility of collecting passive sensing data with a diverse sample of adolescents, but barriers remain on adolescent willingness to engage in this research and the strength of signal between passively sensed variables and self-report constructs. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
被动感应技术在捕捉青少年心理健康的要素方面显示出希望。青少年对当日心理健康指标的自我报告与被动感知变量之间是否存在信号的研究测试可能不一致,特别是与数字行为有关的指标。此外,很少有人知道青少年参与被动感知研究是否在人口统计学和心理健康的一般指标方面有偏见。目前的研究在参与一项正在进行的纵向研究的大量不同样本中招募的青少年中测试了这些目标。青少年(15-20岁,N = 131)参加了一项为期90天的被动感知研究,该研究收集了数字(击键和应用程序使用)和离线(睡眠和身体活动)行为的数据。虽然相关性表明当天心理健康指标与几个被动感知变量(例如,键入负面词语和呼叫行为的比例)之间存在小信号,但当分解人与人之间的关联时,这些关联通常会消失。此外,参与率很低,但几乎没有证据表明,基于心理健康风险或人口统计学的参与或数据覆盖存在偏见。结果表明,在不同的青少年样本中收集被动感知数据是可行的,但青少年参与这项研究的意愿以及被动感知变量与自我报告结构之间的信号强度仍然存在障碍。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Testing the feasibility of passive sensing among adolescents: Implications for mental health.
Passive sensing technology shows promise in capturing elements of adolescent mental health. Research testing if there is a signal between adolescents' self-reports of same-day mental health indicators and passively sensed variables can be inconsistent, particularly with metrics pertaining to digital behaviors. Moreover, little is known if adolescent participation in passive sensing research is biased with respect to demographics and general metrics of mental health. The current research tested these aims among adolescents recruited from a large and diverse sample participating in an ongoing longitudinal study. Adolescents (aged 15-20, N = 131) participated in a 90-day passive sensing study, which collected data on both digital (keystroke and app usage) and offline (sleep and physical activity) behaviors. Although correlations indicated a small signal between same-day mental health indicators and several passively sensed variables (e.g., proportion of typed negative words and call behaviors), associations typically disappeared when disaggregating between- from within-person associations. Additionally, participation uptake was low, but there was little evidence of bias in participation or data coverage based on mental health risk or demographics. Results demonstrate the feasibility of collecting passive sensing data with a diverse sample of adolescents, but barriers remain on adolescent willingness to engage in this research and the strength of signal between passively sensed variables and self-report constructs. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).