Using wearable cameras to categorize the type and context of screen-based behaviors among adolescents : Observational study

Journal article


Thomas, George, Bennie, Jason, De Cocker, Katrien, Andriyani, Fitria, Booker, Bridget and Biddle, Stuart. (2022). Using wearable cameras to categorize the type and context of screen-based behaviors among adolescents : Observational study. JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting. 5(1), p. Article e28208. https://doi.org/10.2196/28208
AuthorsThomas, George, Bennie, Jason, De Cocker, Katrien, Andriyani, Fitria, Booker, Bridget and Biddle, Stuart
Abstract

Background:
Automated wearable cameras present a new opportunity to accurately assess human behavior. However, this technology is seldom used in the study of adolescent’s screen exposure, and the field is reliant on poor-quality self-report data.

Objective:
This study aimed to examine adolescents’ screen exposure by categorizing the type and context of behaviors using automated wearable cameras.

Methods:
Adolescents (mean age 15.4 years, SD 1.6 years; n=10) wore a camera for 3 school evenings and 1 weekend day. The camera captured an image every 10 seconds. Fieldwork was completed between February and March 2020, and data were analyzed in August 2020. Images were date and time stamped, and coded for screen type, content, and context.

Results:
Data representing 71,396 images were analyzed. Overall, 74.0% (52,842/71,396) of images contained screens and 16.8% (11,976/71,396) of images contained multiple screens. Most screen exposures involved television sets (25,950/71,396, 36.3%), smartphones (20,851/71,396, 29.2%), and laptop computers (15,309/71,396, 21.4%). The context of screen use differed by device type, although most screen exposures occurred at home (62,455/64,856, 96.3%) and with solitary engagement (54,430/64,856, 83.9%). The immediate after-school period saw high laptop computer use (4785/15,950, 30.0%), while smartphone use (2059/5320, 38.7%) peaked during prebedtime hours. Weekend screen exposure was high, with smartphone use (1070/1927, 55.5%) peaking in the early morning period and fluctuating throughout the day.

Conclusions:
There was evidence for high screen use during the after-school and weekend period, mostly through solitary engagement, and within the home environment. The findings may inform the basis of larger studies aimed at examining screen exposure in free-living conditions.

Keywordsadolescent; screen time; smartphone; television
Year2022
JournalJMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
Journal citation5 (1), p. Article e28208
PublisherJMIR Publications Inc.
ISSN2561-6722
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.2196/28208
PubMed ID35311672
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85128137133
PubMed Central IDPMC8981006
Open accessPublished as ‘gold’ (paid) open access
Page range1-17
FunderResearch Training Program Scholarship (RTP), Australian Government
Publisher's version
License
File Access Level
Open
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online21 Mar 2022
Publication process dates
Accepted26 Jan 2022
Deposited19 Jul 2023
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https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/8z58w/using-wearable-cameras-to-categorize-the-type-and-context-of-screen-based-behaviors-among-adolescents-observational-study

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License: CC BY 4.0
File access level: Open

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