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Implementing Ecological Momentary Assessment in Audiological Research: Opportunities and Challenges.

Schinkel-Bielefeld, Nadja; Burke, Louise; Holube, Inga; Iankilevitch, Maria; Jenstad, Lorienne M; Lelic, Dina; Naylor, Graham; Singh, Gurjit; Smeds, Karolina; von Gablenz, Petra; Wolters, Florian; Wu, Yu-Hsiang

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Authors

Nadja Schinkel-Bielefeld

Louise Burke

Inga Holube

Maria Iankilevitch

Lorienne M Jenstad

Dina Lelic

Gurjit Singh

Karolina Smeds

Petra von Gablenz

Florian Wolters

Yu-Hsiang Wu



Abstract

Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) is a way to evaluate experiences in everyday life. It is a powerful research tool but can be complex and challenging for beginners. Application of EMA in audiological research brings with it opportunities and challenges that differ from other research disciplines. This tutorial discusses important considerations when conducting EMA studies in hearing care. While more research is needed to develop specific guidelines for the various potential applications of EMA in hearing research, we hope this article can alert hearing researchers new to EMA to pitfalls when using EMA and help strengthen their study design. The current article elaborates study design details, such as choice of participants, representativeness of the study period for participants' lives, and balancing participant burden with data requirements. Mobile devices and sensors to collect objective data on the acoustic situation are reviewed alongside different possibilities for EMA setups ranging from online questionnaires paired with a timer to proprietary apps that also have access to parameters of a hearing device. In addition to considerations for survey design, a list of questionnaire items from previous studies is provided. For each item, an example and a list of references are given. EMA typically provides data sets that are rich but also challenging in that they are noisy, and there is often unequal amount of data between participants. After recommendations on how to check the data for compliance, reactivity, and careless responses, methods for statistical analysis on the individual level and on the group level are discussed including special methods for direct comparison of hearing device programs.

Citation

Schinkel-Bielefeld, N., Burke, L., Holube, I., Iankilevitch, M., Jenstad, L. M., Lelic, D., Naylor, G., Singh, G., Smeds, K., von Gablenz, P., Wolters, F., & Wu, Y.-H. (2024). Implementing Ecological Momentary Assessment in Audiological Research: Opportunities and Challenges. American Journal of Audiology, 33(3), 648-673. https://doi.org/10.1044/2024_AJA-23-00249

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 11, 2024
Online Publication Date Jul 1, 2024
Publication Date Sep 3, 2024
Deposit Date Mar 12, 2025
Publicly Available Date Mar 12, 2025
Journal American Journal of Audiology
Print ISSN 1059-0889
Electronic ISSN 1558-9137
Publisher American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 33
Issue 3
Pages 648-673
DOI https://doi.org/10.1044/2024_AJA-23-00249
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/37300833
Publisher URL https://pubs.asha.org/doi/10.1044/2024_AJA-23-00249

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