2018
DOI: 10.5204/mcj.1348
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Is a Fitbit a Diary? Self-Tracking and Autobiography

Abstract: Data becomes something of a mirror in which people see themselves reflected. (Sorapure 270)In a 2014 essay for The New Yorker, the humourist David Sedaris recounts an obsession spurred by the purchase of a Fitbit, a wearable activity-tracker that sends a celebratory “tingle” to his wrist every 10, 000 steps. He starts “stepping out” modestly but is soon working hard, steadily improving on the manufacturer’s recommended baseline. “But why?” asks Sedaris’ partner Hugh: “Why isn’t twelve thousand enough?” “Becaus… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Although there was a modest reduction in the number of people providing valid accelerometer data (≥1 week per month) during the study, as depicted in Figure 1A, adherence to and use of the accelerometer was higher than might be expected from surveying the literature in the general population or among individuals with MS . Proactive study management strategies might account for the relatively favorable retention rate in our study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Although there was a modest reduction in the number of people providing valid accelerometer data (≥1 week per month) during the study, as depicted in Figure 1A, adherence to and use of the accelerometer was higher than might be expected from surveying the literature in the general population or among individuals with MS . Proactive study management strategies might account for the relatively favorable retention rate in our study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…125), the interview approach intends to hold a space for participant recollections: they authorise deeply personal reflections, and give narratives room to flourish in conjunction with, but beyond, the technological shaping of recordkeeping and logging time (Wajcman 2019). Much like the authorial tactics of working around the predefined pages of a paper calendar or diary (Cardell 2018; 2020), participants enact authorial ownership in the spaces between data points and make personally coherent stories within the structured presentations of their activities.…”
Section: Research Methods: Self-tracking Show-and-tellmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But an express connection back to personal forms of memory-making, where devices and their agendas are decentred – by both the research orientation and by the user practices they describe – has been provided by feminist research perspectives. These collectively emphasise a connection, often discounted in the highly gendered technology sector, between self-tracking and personal diaries and similar forms of life-writing (Cardell 2018; Humphreys 2018; Lupton 2019; Rettberg 2014). Courtesy of this work, there is a greater recognition of how self-tracking technologies capture otherwise undervalued moments in everyday life, while also highlighting the circularity of gendered design/usage in self-tracking, particularly in domains of health and care.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People even develop affective ties to the data they track (idem, 87). 4 Life-writing scholar Kylie Cardell has considered diaries as precursors of modern-day self-trackers, with a focus on 'how-to-diaries': instruction manuals for diary keeping that originated in Puritan circles in the seventeenth century (Cardell 2018(Cardell , 2020. Notwithstanding the importance of these manuals, they primarily designate diaristic discourse 'from above', not 'ordinary' diarists 'from below', which will be my focus here.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%