Abstract

During pandemics, effective interventions require monitoring the problem at different scales and understanding the various tradeoffs between efficacy, privacy, and economic burden. To address these challenges, we propose a framework where we perform Bayesian change-point analysis on aggregate behavior markers extracted from mobile sensing data collected during the COVID-19 pandemic. Results generated by 598 participants for up to four months reveal rich insights: We observe an increase in smartphone usage around February 10th, followed by an increase in email usage around February 27th and, finally, a large reduction in participant’s mobility around March 13th. These behavior changes overlapped with important news events and government directives such as the naming of COVID-19, a spike in the number of reported cases in Europe, and the declaration of national emergency by President Trump. We also show that our detected change points align with changes in large scale external sources, including number of COVID-19 tweets, COVID-19 search traffic, and a large-scale foot traffic data collected by SafeGraph, providing further validation of our method. Our results show promise towards the feasibility of using mobile sensing to understand communities’ responses to public health interventions.

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