Frontiers in Social Science features new research in the flagship journals of the Social Science Research Council’s founding disciplinary associations. Every month we publish a new selection of articles from the most recent issues of these journals, marking the rapid advance of the frontiers of social and behavioral science.

Ethical challenges of smartphone location data

Newly available smartphone data allowing researchers to geolocate individuals’ movements pose new ethical challenges.

Author(s)
Roberto Lay González, Siugmin Huck, and Jonathan Dixon
Journal
American Psychologist
Citation
González, R., Lay, S., Huck, J., & Dixon, J. (2024). The use of GNSS technology in smartphones to collect sensitive data on human mobility practices: Ethical challenges and potential solutions. American Psychologist, 79(1), 52–64. https://doi.org/10.1037/amp0001194 Copy
Abstract

The advent of mobile smartphones and similar technology has opened new opportunities for studying human mobility within psychology and companion disciplines such as human geography, demography, and sociology. This article examines how such research raises novel ethical concerns. To do so, we outline two research projects: one based in Northern Ireland (The Belfast Mobility Project) and the other in Chile (The Norm-Contact Mobility Project), drawing concrete examples of the ethical challenges encountered throughout both projects, which used global navigational satellite systems as a tool for data collection. We discuss new threats to participant confidentiality and anonymity, problems of “unanticipated” data collection and exploitation, emerging difficulties in achieving properly informed consent, and concerns regarding the representation of vulnerable populations with limited access to smartphones and a legitimate fear of surveillance. We also reflect on the different measures we took to tackle these challenges and discuss the importance of implementing wider changes in the protocols associated with basic ethical research principles.

Long-term exposure to immigrants reduces prejudice

Long-term exposure to neighbors of a given foreign ancestry leads to reduced prejudice and increased generosity towards those who share that ancestry.

Author(s)
Leonardo Bursztyn, Thomas Chaney, Tarek A. Hassan, and Aakaash Rao
Journal
American Economic Review
Citation
Bursztyn, Leonardo, Thomas Chaney, Tarek A. Hassan, and Aakaash Rao. 2024. "The Immigrant Next Door." American Economic Review, 114 (2): 348-84. Copy
Abstract

We study how decades-long exposure to individuals of a given foreign descent shapes natives' attitudes and behavior toward that group. Using individualized donations data, we show that long-term exposure to a given foreign ancestry leads to more generous behavior specifically toward that group's ancestral country. Focusing on exposure to Arab Muslims to examine mechanisms, we show that long-term exposure (i) decreases explicit and implicit prejudice against Arab Muslims, (ii) reduces support for policies and political candidates hostile toward Arab Muslims, (iii) increases charitable donations to Arab countries, (iv) leads to more personal contact with Arab Muslims, and (v) increases knowledge of Arab Muslims and Islam.

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