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Mobile Apps to Fight the COVID-19 Crisis
The COVID-19 pandemic led to a multi-faceted global crisis, which triggered the diverse and quickly emerging use of old and new digital tools. We have developed a multi-channel approach for the monitoring and analysis of a subset of such tools, the COVID-19 related mobile applications (apps). Our ap...
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Published in: | Data (Basel) 2021-10, Vol.6 (10), p.106 |
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container_title | Data (Basel) |
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creator | Tsinaraki, Chrisa Mitton, Irena Minghini, Marco Micheli, Marina Kotsev, Alexander Hernandez Quiros, Lorena Spinelli, Fabiano-Antonio Dalla Benetta, Alessandro Schade, Sven |
description | The COVID-19 pandemic led to a multi-faceted global crisis, which triggered the diverse and quickly emerging use of old and new digital tools. We have developed a multi-channel approach for the monitoring and analysis of a subset of such tools, the COVID-19 related mobile applications (apps). Our approach builds on the information available in the two most prominent app stores (i.e., Google Play for Android-powered devices and Apple’s App Store for iOS-powered devices), as well as on relevant tweets and digital media outlets. The dataset presented here is one of the outcomes of this approach, uses the content of the app stores and enriches it, providing aggregated information about 837 mobile apps published across the world to fight the COVID-19 crisis. This information includes: (a) information available in the mobile app stores between 20 April 2020 and 2 August 2020; (b) complementary information obtained from manual analysis performed until mid-September 2020; and (c) status information about app availability on 28 February 2021, when we last collected data from the mobile app stores. We highlight our findings with a series of descriptives, which depict both the activities in the app stores and the qualitative information that was revealed by the manual analysis. |
doi_str_mv | 10.3390/data6100106 |
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source | Publicly Available Content Database; Coronavirus Research Database |
subjects | Applications programs Contact tracing Coronaviruses COVID-19 Data collection Datasets GPS Information sharing Medical research mobile apps Mobile computing Mobile operating systems Pandemics personal data Privacy Qualitative analysis Stores |
title | Mobile Apps to Fight the COVID-19 Crisis |
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