Using wearable proximity sensors to characterize social contact patterns in a village of rural Malawi

Abstract Measuring close proximity interactions between individuals can provide key information on social contacts in human communities and related behaviours. This is even more essential in rural settings in low- and middle-income countries where there is a need to understand contact patterns for t...

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Main Authors: Laura Ozella, Daniela Paolotti, Guilherme Lichand, Jorge P. Rodríguez, Simon Haenni, John Phuka, Onicio B. Leal-Neto, Ciro Cattuto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-09-01
Series:EPJ Data Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1140/epjds/s13688-021-00302-w
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spelling doaj-7dd7cc06fe26402f84cc3ccb352382992021-09-12T12:03:09ZengSpringerOpenEPJ Data Science2193-11272021-09-0110111710.1140/epjds/s13688-021-00302-wUsing wearable proximity sensors to characterize social contact patterns in a village of rural MalawiLaura Ozella0Daniela Paolotti1Guilherme Lichand2Jorge P. Rodríguez3Simon Haenni4John Phuka5Onicio B. Leal-Neto6Ciro Cattuto7ISI FoundationISI FoundationDepartment of Economics, University of ZurichISI FoundationDepartment of Economics, University of ZurichCollege of MedicineDepartment of Economics, University of ZurichISI FoundationAbstract Measuring close proximity interactions between individuals can provide key information on social contacts in human communities and related behaviours. This is even more essential in rural settings in low- and middle-income countries where there is a need to understand contact patterns for the implementation of strategies for social protection interventions. We report the quantitative assessment of contact patterns in a village in rural Malawi, based on proximity sensors technology that allows for high-resolution measurements of social contacts. Our results revealed that the community structure of the village was highly correlated with the household membership of the individuals, thus confirming the importance of the family ties within the village. Social contacts within households occurred mainly between adults and children, and adults and adolescents and most of the inter-household social relationships occurred among adults and among adolescents. At the individual level, age and gender social assortment were observed in the inter-household network, and age disassortativity was instead observed in intra-household networks. Moreover, we obtained a clear trend of the daily contact activity of the village. Family members congregated in the early morning, during lunch time and dinner time. In contrast, inter-household contact activity displayed a growth from the morning, reaching a maximum in the afternoon. The proximity sensors technology used in this study provided high resolution temporal data characterized by timescales comparable with those intrinsic to social dynamics and it thus allowed to have access to the level of information needed to understand the social context of the village.https://doi.org/10.1140/epjds/s13688-021-00302-wSocial contact patternsContact networkWearable proximity sensorsRural settingsDeveloping countriesHouseholds
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Ozella
Daniela Paolotti
Guilherme Lichand
Jorge P. Rodríguez
Simon Haenni
John Phuka
Onicio B. Leal-Neto
Ciro Cattuto
spellingShingle Laura Ozella
Daniela Paolotti
Guilherme Lichand
Jorge P. Rodríguez
Simon Haenni
John Phuka
Onicio B. Leal-Neto
Ciro Cattuto
Using wearable proximity sensors to characterize social contact patterns in a village of rural Malawi
EPJ Data Science
Social contact patterns
Contact network
Wearable proximity sensors
Rural settings
Developing countries
Households
author_facet Laura Ozella
Daniela Paolotti
Guilherme Lichand
Jorge P. Rodríguez
Simon Haenni
John Phuka
Onicio B. Leal-Neto
Ciro Cattuto
author_sort Laura Ozella
title Using wearable proximity sensors to characterize social contact patterns in a village of rural Malawi
title_short Using wearable proximity sensors to characterize social contact patterns in a village of rural Malawi
title_full Using wearable proximity sensors to characterize social contact patterns in a village of rural Malawi
title_fullStr Using wearable proximity sensors to characterize social contact patterns in a village of rural Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Using wearable proximity sensors to characterize social contact patterns in a village of rural Malawi
title_sort using wearable proximity sensors to characterize social contact patterns in a village of rural malawi
publisher SpringerOpen
series EPJ Data Science
issn 2193-1127
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Measuring close proximity interactions between individuals can provide key information on social contacts in human communities and related behaviours. This is even more essential in rural settings in low- and middle-income countries where there is a need to understand contact patterns for the implementation of strategies for social protection interventions. We report the quantitative assessment of contact patterns in a village in rural Malawi, based on proximity sensors technology that allows for high-resolution measurements of social contacts. Our results revealed that the community structure of the village was highly correlated with the household membership of the individuals, thus confirming the importance of the family ties within the village. Social contacts within households occurred mainly between adults and children, and adults and adolescents and most of the inter-household social relationships occurred among adults and among adolescents. At the individual level, age and gender social assortment were observed in the inter-household network, and age disassortativity was instead observed in intra-household networks. Moreover, we obtained a clear trend of the daily contact activity of the village. Family members congregated in the early morning, during lunch time and dinner time. In contrast, inter-household contact activity displayed a growth from the morning, reaching a maximum in the afternoon. The proximity sensors technology used in this study provided high resolution temporal data characterized by timescales comparable with those intrinsic to social dynamics and it thus allowed to have access to the level of information needed to understand the social context of the village.
topic Social contact patterns
Contact network
Wearable proximity sensors
Rural settings
Developing countries
Households
url https://doi.org/10.1140/epjds/s13688-021-00302-w
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