Tracking Mobile Workers’ Daily Activities with the Contextual Activity Sampling System




Muukkonen Hanni, Hakkarainen Kai, Li Shupin, Vartiainen Matti

Aaron Marcus

Third International Conference, DUXU 2014, Held as Part of HCI International 2014

2014

Design, User Experience, and Usability. User Experience Desing for Diverse Interaction Platforms and Environments

Lecture Notes in Computer Science

8518

289

300

12

978-3-319-07625-6

978-3-319-07626-3

0302-9743

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-07626-3



The present study used smart phones to collect contextualized data on professionals’ daily working activities; our purpose was to trace professionals’ work engagement and socio-emotional activities. We used two tools, the Contextual Activity Sampling System (CASS-Q) and ContextLogger for collecting, in parallel, complementary self-report and location-sensor data.

This allowed us to compare the types of data and their richness of information. The methods and instruments developed enabled one to trace various aspects of the mobile multi-locational workers’ positive and negative self-reported affects in work contexts, as well as their activities and experiences of challenge and competence. The secondary working contexts (e.g., seminars, meetings, customer’s office), especially, included interactions with others leading to both high positive and negative affects. The results also indicate that the participants’

self-reported locations corresponded closely with the actual location documented by ContextLogger. Our results suggest possibilities for developing an algorithm that uses location information to automatically recognize certain activity contexts.




Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 20:44