Deakin University
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The Circles of Connections: An evidence-based social visualisation tool to diagnose the strengths and weaknesses of your social connections

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-11-01, 00:00 authored by Arezou Soltani Panah, Tracy De Cotta, Jane Farmer, Amir Aryani
In modernity, there is a growing obsession with tracking various aspects of an individual’s life, that is the ‘quantified self’. The latest trends in technology have made it much easier to track many elements of life such as heart rate, weight loss, fitness activity, and sleep patterns. The list can be extended by collecting data on others as well (such as a baby or pet), leading to the notion of the ‘quantified other’. This new wave in quantified self/other data has an impact on social and behavioural science research as well, moving the field away from a focus on survey studies towards more complex data-driven approaches. However, feasible ways of measuring the more intangible aspects of life such as connectedness, feelings, and resilience are rarely on offer in the self-quantified market. To address this, in partnership with Red Cross Australia, we have developed a social visualisation tool that helps people to assess their social connections, and understand how these connections contribute to aspects of social capital such as participation, support, feelings of safety and trust. We believe having such a tool to self-quantify an individual’s social connections offers the potential for better public health outcomes. The greater impact can be made at a community level to understand and facilitate social connections of diverse communities and raise awareness about their needs. Enriching such information with other spatial or sociodemographic data can help organisations like the Red Cross for provision of targeted supports particularly around areas of disaster management and engaging marginalised or vulnerable populations, and thus to build more resilient communities

History

Journal

Journal of Community Informatics

Volume

14

Season

Special Issue: Designing Participation for the Digital Fringe

Pagination

17-37

Location

Vancouver, Canada

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1712-4441

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Journal of Community Informatics