Comparing the data quality of global positioning system devices and mobile phones for assessing relationships between place, mobility, and health: Field study

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Abstract

Background: Mobile devices are increasingly used to collect location-based information from individuals about their physical activities, dietary intake, environmental exposures, and mental well-being. Such research, which typically uses wearable devices or mobile phones to track location, benefits from the growing availability of fine-grained data regarding human mobility. However, little is known about the comparative geospatial accuracy of such devices. Objective: In this study, we compared the data quality of location information collected from two mobile devices that determine location in different ways—a global positioning system (GPS) watch and a mobile phone with Google’s Location History feature enabled. Methods: A total of 21 chronically ill participants carried both devices, which generated digital traces of locations, for 28 days. A mobile phone–based brief ecological momentary assessment (EMA) survey asked participants to manually report their location at 4 random times throughout each day. Participants also took part in qualitative interviews and completed surveys twice during the study period in which they reviewed recent mobile phone and watch trace data to compare the devices’ trace data with their memory of their activities on those days. Trace data from the devices were compared on the basis of (1) missing data days, (2) reasons for missing data, (3) distance between the route data collected for matching day and the associated EMA survey locations, and (4) activity space total area and density surfaces. Results: The watch resulted in a much higher proportion of missing data days (P

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Goodspeed, R., Yan, X., Hardy, J., Vydiswaran, V. V., Berrocal, V. J., Clarke, P., … Veinot, T. (2018). Comparing the data quality of global positioning system devices and mobile phones for assessing relationships between place, mobility, and health: Field study. JMIR MHealth and UHealth, 6(8). https://doi.org/10.2196/mhealth.9771

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