Difference between revisions of "User:Esenabre"

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{{People Infobox
 
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Hi, I’m Enric Senabre, currently a postdoc researcher at Universitat Oberta de Catalunya. I’m interested in self-research at the intersection of citizen science and (auto)ethnography. By training and skills, let’s say I’m more “quali” than “quanti” oriented.  
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Hi, I’m Enric Senabre, currently a postdoc researcher at [https://www.uoc.edu/portal/en/index.html Universitat Oberta de Catalunya]. I’m interested in self-research at the intersection of citizen science and (auto)ethnography. By training and skills, let’s say I’m more “quali” than “quanti” oriented.  
  
 
During my PhD 2016-2019 I did a rigorous self-tracking of time spent working in case studies for my thesis on co-creation VS management / coordination tasks, as I was studying and working part-time in a research group.  
 
During my PhD 2016-2019 I did a rigorous self-tracking of time spent working in case studies for my thesis on co-creation VS management / coordination tasks, as I was studying and working part-time in a research group.  
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In parallel that time I also kept a journal of my dreams, when waking up. Pages and pages of handwritten words which I found hard to analyze (apart from some obvious recurrences and connections to feelings) and not very rewarding except for memory and serendipity reasons.
 
In parallel that time I also kept a journal of my dreams, when waking up. Pages and pages of handwritten words which I found hard to analyze (apart from some obvious recurrences and connections to feelings) and not very rewarding except for memory and serendipity reasons.
  
My most “serious” attempt at self-research, moved by curiosity but also a sort of addictive routine, was a self-intervention during May 2021 on smartphone disengagement, which I could visualize and later on understand better with the help of other self-researchers from the OH community.
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My most “serious” attempt at self-research, moved by curiosity but also a sort of addictive routine, was a self-intervention (and afterwards [[Autoethnography using one button tracker and Jupyter notebook|autoethnography]]) during May 2021 on [[Smartphone Disengagement|smartphone disengagement]] (using an [[One Button Tracker|one button tracker]], [[pen and paper]] and the [[reMarkable]] tablet), which I could visualize and later on understand better with the help of other self-researchers from the OH community.
  
 
Currently I’m keeping an open journal on my postdoc activities, retrospectively documenting some activist projects I have been involved in, and trying to apply collaborative writing for some case studies on what has been recently coined “citizen ethnography”.
 
Currently I’m keeping an open journal on my postdoc activities, retrospectively documenting some activist projects I have been involved in, and trying to apply collaborative writing for some case studies on what has been recently coined “citizen ethnography”.
  
 
[[Category:People]]
 
[[Category:People]]

Latest revision as of 09:24, 28 February 2023

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Hi, I’m Enric Senabre, currently a postdoc researcher at Universitat Oberta de Catalunya. I’m interested in self-research at the intersection of citizen science and (auto)ethnography. By training and skills, let’s say I’m more “quali” than “quanti” oriented.

During my PhD 2016-2019 I did a rigorous self-tracking of time spent working in case studies for my thesis on co-creation VS management / coordination tasks, as I was studying and working part-time in a research group.

The fall of 2020 I did some initial attempts to track and analyze my mood with Daylio for one month, but I wasn’t quite satisfied with that app. Then in 2021 I moved for seven months to a daily self-survey, registering a broad range of personal activities (mood, type of dreams and pre-sleep activity, type of food & drinks consumed, nicotine fills for vaping, social life, sports and hobbies, type of music I listened, levels of productivity, even Tarot cards from each morning!) and well, I wasn’t able to find very exciting correlations between any of them :)

In parallel that time I also kept a journal of my dreams, when waking up. Pages and pages of handwritten words which I found hard to analyze (apart from some obvious recurrences and connections to feelings) and not very rewarding except for memory and serendipity reasons.

My most “serious” attempt at self-research, moved by curiosity but also a sort of addictive routine, was a self-intervention (and afterwards autoethnography) during May 2021 on smartphone disengagement (using an one button tracker, pen and paper and the reMarkable tablet), which I could visualize and later on understand better with the help of other self-researchers from the OH community.

Currently I’m keeping an open journal on my postdoc activities, retrospectively documenting some activist projects I have been involved in, and trying to apply collaborative writing for some case studies on what has been recently coined “citizen ethnography”.