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Evaluating the accuracy of data collection on mobile phones: A study of forms, SMS, and voice
72
Citations
21
References
2009
Year
Unknown Venue
Voice InteractionEngineeringMobile InteractionCommunicationMobile CommunicationMobile AnalyticsSpeech RecognitionData ScienceData CollectionManagementCall Detail RecordMobile PhonesTelehealthData ManagementAssistive TechnologyUser ExperienceMobile ComputingInformation ManagementCue CardsMobile Positioning DataTechnologyVoiceMobile Data CollectionSpeech ProcessingHuman-computer InteractionMobile HealthVoice TechnologySpeech InterfaceHealth InformaticsData Modeling
While mobile phones have found broad application in reporting health, financial, and environmental data, there has been little study of the possible errors incurred during mobile data collection. This paper provides the first (to our knowledge) quantitative evaluation of data entry accuracy on mobile phones in a resource-poor setting. Via a study of 13 users in Gujarat, India, we evaluated three user interfaces: 1) electronic forms, containing numeric fields and multiple-choice menus, 2) SMS, where users enter delimited text messages according to printed cue cards, and 3) voice, where users call an operator and dictate the data in real-time. Our results indicate error rates (per datum entered) of 4.2% for electronic forms, 4.8% for SMS, and 0.45% for voice. These results caused us to migrate our own initiative (a tuberculosis treatment program in rural India) from electronic forms to voice, in order to avoid errors on critical health data. While our study has some limitations, including varied backgrounds and training of participants, it suggests that some care is needed in deploying electronic interfaces in resource-poor settings. Further, it raises the possibility of using voice as a low-tech, high-accuracy, and cost-effective interface for mobile data collection.
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