HCAug 8, 2021

Exploring the Personal Informatics Analysis Gap: "There's a Lot of Bacon"

arXiv:2108.03761v11 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses the problem of inflexible analysis tools for individuals tracking personal data, which is incremental as it builds on existing research by highlighting a specific gap.

The paper identifies a gap in personal informatics research regarding flexible data analysis tools, based on a review and a longitudinal study with asthmatics using air quality data, revealing diverse user goals and behaviors like playful exploration and reluctance to use existing tools.

Personal informatics research helps people track personal data for the purposes of self-reflection and gaining self-knowledge. This field, however, has predominantly focused on the data collection and insight-generation elements of self-tracking, with less attention paid to flexible data analysis. As a result, this inattention has led to inflexible analytic pipelines that do not reflect or support the diverse ways people want to engage with their data. This paper contributes a review of personal informatics and visualization research literature to expose a gap in our knowledge for designing flexible tools that assist people engaging with and analyzing personal data in personal contexts, what we call the personal informatics analysis gap. We explore this gap through a multistage longitudinal study on how asthmatics engage with personal air quality data, and we report how participants: were motivated by broad and diverse goals; exhibited patterns in the way they explored their data; engaged with their data in playful ways; discovered new insights through serendipitous exploration; and were reluctant to use analysis tools on their own. These results present new opportunities for visual analysis research and suggest the need for fundamental shifts in how and what we design when supporting personal data analysis.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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