Publication | Closed Access
Sensing Behavioral Change over Time
101
Citations
60
References
2018
Year
EngineeringBiometricsBehavioral MeasurementWearable TechnologyIndividual DifferencesBehavior PredictionBehavior MonitoringPersonality TraitsSocial SciencesPsychologyBehavioral ChangeAffective ComputingStatisticsQuantified SelfBehavioral SciencesCognitive SciencePredictive AnalyticsRegularity IndexFlexible Regularity IndexMobile ComputingMobile SensingSocial BehaviorHuman-computer Interaction
Personality traits describe individual differences in patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving ("between-person" variability). But individuals also show changes in their own patterns over time ("within-person" variability). Existing approaches to measuring within-person variability typically rely on self-report methods that do not account for fine-grained behavior change patterns (e.g., hour-by-hour). In this paper, we use passive sensing data from mobile phones to examine the extent to which within-person variability in behavioral patterns can predict self-reported personality traits. Data were collected from 646 college students who participated in a self-tracking assignment for 14 days. To measure variability in behavior, we focused on 5 sensed behaviors (ambient audio amplitude, exposure to human voice, physical activity, phone usage, and location data) and computed 4 within-person variability features (simple standard deviation, circadian rhythm, regularity index, and flexible regularity index). We identified a number of significant correlations between the within-person variability features and the self-reported personality traits. Finally, we designed a model to predict the personality traits from the within-person variability features. Our results show that we can predict personality traits with good accuracy. The resulting predictions correlate with self-reported personality traits in the range of r = 0.32, MAE = 0.45 (for Openness in iOS users) to r = 0.69, MAE = 0.55 (for Extraversion in Android users). Our results suggest that within-person variability features from smartphone data has potential for passive personality assessment.
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