How should social mixing be measured: Comparing web-based survey and sensor-based methods

Timo Smieszek*, Victoria C. Barclay, Indulaxmi Seeni, Jeanette J. Rainey, Hongjiang Gao, Amra Uzicanin, Marcel Salathé

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    53 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Background: Contact surveys and diaries have conventionally been used to measure contact networks in different settings for elucidating infectious disease transmission dynamics of respiratory infections. More recently, technological advances have permitted the use of wireless sensor devices, which can be worn by individuals interacting in a particular social context to record high resolution mixing patterns. To date, a direct comparison of these two different methods for collecting contact data has not been performed.Methods: We studied the contact network at a United States high school in the spring of 2012. All school members (i.e., students, teachers, and other staff) were invited to wear wireless sensor devices for a single school day, and asked to remember and report the name and duration of all of their close proximity conversational contacts for that day in an online contact survey. We compared the two methods in terms of the resulting network densities, nodal degrees, and degree distributions. We also assessed the correspondence between the methods at the dyadic and individual levels.Results: We found limited congruence in recorded contact data between the online contact survey and wireless sensors. In particular, there was only negligible correlation between the two methods for nodal degree, and the degree distribution differed substantially between both methods. We found that survey underreporting was a significant source of the difference between the two methods, and that this difference could be improved by excluding individuals who reported only a few contact partners. Additionally, survey reporting was more accurate for contacts of longer duration, and very inaccurate for contacts of shorter duration. Finally, female participants tended to report more accurately than male participants.Conclusions: Online contact surveys and wireless sensor devices collected incongruent network data from an identical setting. This finding suggests that these two methods cannot be used interchangeably for informing models of infectious disease dynamics.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number136
    JournalBMC Infectious Diseases
    Volume14
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 10 Mar 2014

    Bibliographical note

    Copyright:
    Copyright 2014 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

    Keywords

    • Contact networks
    • Contact survey
    • Droplet transmission
    • Proximity network
    • Social network
    • Wireless sensor network

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