Smartphone-based Wellness Assessment Using Mobile Environmental Sensor
This work addresses mental health monitoring by enabling individualized care through environmental sensing, though it is incremental in applying existing sensor technology to this domain.
The study developed a smartphone-based system to assess wellness by correlating environmental factors like light and noise with stress levels, finding statistically significant correlations in experiments with 62 participants.
Mental health and general wellness are becoming a growing concern in our society. Environmental factors contribute to mental illness and have the power to affect a person's wellness. This work presents a smartphone-based wellness assessment system and examines if there is any correlation with one's environment and their wellness. The introduced system was initiated in response to a growing need for individualized and independent mental health care and evaluated through experimentation. The participants were given an Android smartphone and a mobile sensor board and they were asked to complete a brief psychological survey three times per day. During the survey completion, the board in their possession is reading environmental data. The five environmental variables collected are temperature, humidity, air pressure, luminosity, and noise level. Upon submission of the survey, the results of the survey and the environmental data are sent to a server for further processing. Three experiments with 62 participants in total have been completed. The correlation most regularly deemed statistically significant was that of light and audio and stress.