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@article{2215782, author = {Lebedíková, Michaela and Tkaczyk, Michal and Blahošová, Jana and Elavsky, Steriani and Šmahel, David}, address = {Hamburg}, booktitle = {Methods in practice : Studying children and youth online}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.21241/ssoar.83031}, keywords = {ecological momentary assessment; adolescents; smartphone use; smartphone data collection}, language = {eng}, location = {Hamburg}, pages = {8-11}, publisher = {Leibniz Institute for Media Research}, title = {Researching adolescents’ digital technology usage with a smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment (EMA)}, url = {https://core-evidence.eu/methods-toolkit/handbook-part1/handbook-digital-technology-ema}, year = {2022} }
TY - JOUR ID - 2215782 AU - Lebedíková, Michaela - Tkaczyk, Michal - Blahošová, Jana - Elavsky, Steriani - Šmahel, David PY - 2022 TI - Researching adolescents’ digital technology usage with a smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment (EMA) PB - Leibniz Institute for Media Research CY - Hamburg KW - ecological momentary assessment KW - adolescents KW - smartphone use KW - smartphone data collection UR - https://core-evidence.eu/methods-toolkit/handbook-part1/handbook-digital-technology-ema N2 - Adolescents spend increasing time using their smartphones but the current understanding of how they use them is limited and relies on self-reported surveys - therefore we need methods that would capture more precisely how adolescents use their smartphones and how it impacts them. One promising way is to combine ecological momentary assessment, which involves intensive repeated measurement with automated data collection from adolescents’ own phones using a custom-built research app. EMA involves intensive repeated data sampling (i.e., several times a day), allowing for the examination of both within- and between-person variability with both reduced retrospective recall and self-report bias. Our contribution to the book discusses in detail how we developed a research app that our participants installed in their own smartphones, and how we tackled the ethical and technological obstacles. Our experience suggests that the ecological momentary assessment method can be successfully applied by combining self-reported data with objective data from mobile phones. This means that we can better understand adolescents’ smartphone behavior and the complex dynamics of effects at both the within- and between-person levels. That is. we can explore differences between individuals, but also differences in one persons’ usage over time. For researchers interested in utilizing similar research design, we add recommendations and lessons learned. ER -
LEBEDÍKOVÁ, Michaela, Michal TKACZYK, Jana BLAHOŠOVÁ, Steriani ELAVSKY and David ŠMAHEL. Researching adolescents’ digital technology usage with a smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment (EMA). In \textit{Methods in practice : Studying children and youth online}. Hamburg: Leibniz Institute for Media Research, 2022, p.~8-11. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.21241/ssoar.83031.
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