Will phones shed light on our lives?

Bluetooth
Could this hold the key to our daily patterns?

A research project is being set up to define whether mobile phones can help to uncover some sociometric truths about human interaction.

By using Bluetooth and mobile phone triangulation, coupled with landline call data and crime and economic information, Prof. Vassilis Kostakos, a visiting fellow at the University of Bath and Assistant Professor at the University of Madeira, believes he can find out some interesting information about human behaviour.

“The question is: how does information flow through the city?” says Kostakos. “We intend to use mobile devices as routers to help us find out.”

The project has already been tested in Bath, where four mobile scanners were used to trace people moving through the city by the Bluetooth identity emitted by their mobile.

But the new idea will see data from calls made on fixed landlines, such as which areas are calling which others, coupled with data tracking those moving through the test area.

Kostakos says he is already in discussions with landline and mobile operators to help him gain the necessary anonymised information for the study.

“If we can link an area with a set of sociometric values; i.e. a certain area code voted for a certain party in an election, and we could also see the amount of crime in that area, we could learn how people interact by combining that with other data gained from mobiles.”

Blue sky thinking

The project would involve a number of Bluetooth scanners, and Kostakos plans to achieve this by getting the public to download the software onto their PCs to make them into Bluetooth scanners, with the data gained uploaded to the project.

Currently, the software has been downloaded around 3,000 times, but Kostakos estimates it will need around 200-400 machines in the city alone to achieve meaningful data.

There is also the problem of tracking the general public as they might not turn on their Bluetooth at all times or might not bring their mobile with them.

“Another path of us is to work with a mobile operator, who could provide real-time positional data. However, this study would not involve the general public [due to the sensitive nature of the data], so we would need around 20-30 volunteers happy to do this as an alternative to Bluetooth tracking.”

Gareth Beavis
Formerly Global Editor in Chief

Gareth has been part of the consumer technology world in a career spanning three decades. He started life as a staff writer on the fledgling TechRadar, and has grown with the site (primarily as phones, tablets and wearables editor) until becoming Global Editor in Chief in 2018. Gareth has written over 4,000 articles for TechRadar, has contributed expert insight to a number of other publications, chaired panels on zeitgeist technologies, presented at the Gadget Show Live as well as representing the brand on TV and radio for multiple channels including Sky, BBC, ITV and Al-Jazeera. Passionate about fitness, he can bore anyone rigid about stress management, sleep tracking, heart rate variance as well as bemoaning something about the latest iPhone, Galaxy or OLED TV.