Proximity in face-to-face interaction is associated with mobile phone communication
Abstract
The frequency of mobile communication is often used as an indicator of the strength of a tie between two individuals, but how mobile communication relates to other forms of behaving close in social relationships is poorly understood. We used a unique multi-channel 10-month dataset from 510 participants to examine how the frequency of mobile communication was related to the frequency of face-to-face interaction, as measured by Bluetooth scans between the participants mobile phones. The number of phone calls between a dyad was significantly related to the number of face-to-face interactions. Physical proximity during face-to-face interactions was the single strongest predictor of the number of phone calls. Overall, 36 percent of variance in phone calls could be explained by face-to-face interactions and the control variables. Our results suggest that the amount of mobile communication between a dyad is a useful but noisy measure of tie strength with some significant limitations.
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