Examining the Social Context of Alcohol Drinking in Young Adults with Smartphone Sensing
Clicks: 13
ID: 282113
2021
According to prior work, the type of relationship between the person
consuming alcohol and others in the surrounding (friends, family, spouse,
etc.), and the number of those people (alone, with one person, with a group,
etc.) are related to many aspects of alcohol consumption, such as the drinking
amount, location, motives, and mood. Even though the social context is
recognized as an important aspect that influences the drinking behavior of
young adults in alcohol research, relatively little work has been conducted in
smartphone sensing research on this topic. In this study, we analyze the
weekend nightlife drinking behavior of 241 young adults in Switzerland, using a
dataset consisting of self-reports and passive smartphone sensing data over a
period of three months. Using multiple statistical analyses, we show that
features from modalities such as accelerometer, location, application usage,
bluetooth, and proximity could be informative about different social contexts
of drinking. We define and evaluate seven social context inference tasks using
smartphone sensing data, obtaining accuracies of the range 75%-86% in four
two-class and three three-class inferences. Further, we discuss the possibility
of identifying the sex composition of a group of friends using smartphone
sensor data with accuracies over 70%. The results are encouraging towards (a)
supporting future interventions on alcohol consumption that incorporate users'
social context more meaningfully, and (b) reducing the need for user
self-reports when creating drink logs.
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Authors | Lakmal Meegahapola; Florian Labhart; Thanh-Trung Phan; Daniel Gatica-Perez |
Journal | arXiv |
Year | 2021 |
DOI | DOI not found |
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