SEHCLGJan 29

Age Matters: Analyzing Age-Related Discussions in App Reviews

arXiv:2601.21605v1h-index: 15J Syst Softw
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the gap in age-inclusive app design for developers, though it is incremental as it builds on existing methods for text analysis.

The study tackled the problem of understanding age-related user needs in mobile apps by analyzing app reviews, achieving a precision of 92.46% in detecting age discussions using RoBERTa and identifying six dominant themes from 1,429 age-related reviews.

In recent years, mobile applications have become indispensable tools for managing various aspects of life. From enhancing productivity to providing personalized entertainment, mobile apps have revolutionized people's daily routines. Despite this rapid growth and popularity, gaps remain in how these apps address the needs of users from different age groups. Users of varying ages face distinct challenges when interacting with mobile apps, from younger users dealing with inappropriate content to older users having difficulty with usability due to age-related vision and cognition impairments. Although there have been initiatives to create age-inclusive apps, a limited understanding of user perspectives on age-related issues may hinder developers from recognizing specific challenges and implementing effective solutions. In this study, we explore age discussions in app reviews to gain insights into how mobile apps should cater to users across different age groups.We manually curated a dataset of 4,163 app reviews from the Google Play Store and identified 1,429 age-related reviews and 2,734 non-age-related reviews. We employed eight machine learning, deep learning, and large language models to automatically detect age discussions, with RoBERTa performing the best, achieving a precision of 92.46%. Additionally, a qualitative analysis of the 1,429 age-related reviews uncovers six dominant themes reflecting user concerns.

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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