Navigation auf zora.uzh.ch

Search ZORA

ZORA (Zurich Open Repository and Archive)

Diversity, equity, and inclusivity in observational ambulatory assessment: Recommendations from two decades of Electronically Activated Recorder (EAR) research

Kaplan, Deanna M; Tidwell, Colin A; Chung, Joanne M; Alisic, Eva; Demiray, Burcu; Bruni, Michelle; Evora, Selena; Gajewski-Nemes, Julia A; Macbeth, Alessandra; Mangelsdorf, Shaminka N; Mascaro, Jennifer S; Minor, Kyle S; Noga, Rebecca N; Nugent, Nicole R; Polsinelli, Angelina J; Rentscher, Kelly E; Resnikoff, Annie W; Robbins, Megan L; Slatcher, Richard B; Tejeda-Padron, Alma B; Mehl, Matthias R (2023). Diversity, equity, and inclusivity in observational ambulatory assessment: Recommendations from two decades of Electronically Activated Recorder (EAR) research. Behavior Research Methods, 56(4):3207-3225.

Abstract

Ambient audio sampling methods such as the Electronically Activated Recorder (EAR) have become increasingly prominent in clinical and social sciences research. These methods record snippets of naturalistically assessed audio from participants’ daily lives, enabling novel observational research about the daily social interactions, identities, environments, behaviors, and speech of populations of interest. In practice, these scientific opportunities are equaled by methodological challenges: researchers’ own cultural backgrounds and identities can easily and unknowingly permeate the collection, coding, analysis, and interpretation of social data from daily life. Ambient audio sampling poses unique and significant challenges to cultural humility, diversity, equity, and inclusivity (DEI) in scientific research that require systematized attention. Motivated by this observation, an international consortium of 21 researchers who have used ambient audio sampling methodologies created a workgroup with the aim of improving upon existing published guidelines. We pooled formally and informally documented challenges pertaining to DEI in ambient audio sampling from our collective experience on 40+ studies (most of which used the EAR app) in clinical and healthy populations ranging from children to older adults. This article presents our resultant recommendations and argues for the incorporation of community-engaged research methods in observational ambulatory assessment designs looking forward. We provide concrete recommendations across each stage typical of an ambient audio sampling study (recruiting and enrolling participants, developing coding systems, training coders, handling multi-linguistic participants, data analysis and interpretation, and dissemination of results) as well as guiding questions that can be used to adapt these recommendations to project-specific constraints and needs.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:06 Faculty of Arts > Institute of Psychology
Special Collections > Centers of Competence > Healthy Longevity Center
08 Research Priority Programs > Dynamics of Healthy Aging
Dewey Decimal Classification:150 Psychology
Uncontrolled Keywords:General Psychology, Psychology (miscellaneous), Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous), Developmental and Educational Psychology, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Language:English
Date:8 December 2023
Deposited On:12 Feb 2025 11:51
Last Modified:13 Feb 2025 04:45
Publisher:Springer
ISSN:1554-351X
OA Status:Closed
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.3758/s13428-023-02293-0
PubMed ID:38066394

Metadata Export

Statistics

Citations

Dimensions.ai Metrics
2 citations in Web of Science®
4 citations in Scopus®
Google Scholar™

Altmetrics

Downloads

0 downloads since deposited on 12 Feb 2025
0 downloads since 12 months

Authors, Affiliations, Collaborations

Similar Publications