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PERSUASIVE
2007
Springer

Persuasion, Task Interruption and Health Regimen Adherence

13 years 11 months ago
Persuasion, Task Interruption and Health Regimen Adherence
Cueing strategies, such as real-time reminders, are among the most effective methods of persuading individuals to perform healthy behaviors such as taking their medication and exercising. However, these reminders often represent a task interruption for users who are engaged in work activities. This paper presents the results of a study which explores strategies for interrupting users at work to perform a healthy behavior, in which the primary outcome of interest is long-term adherence to a desired health behavior change regimen. We find that the degree of perceived politeness of interruptions is positively correlated with predicted long-term adherence, but negatively correlated with short-term compliance. We also find that, among several interruption coordination strategies previously explored in the literature, empathic interruptions are superior overall in gaining both short-term compliance and long-term adherence.
Timothy W. Bickmore, Daniel Mauer, Francisco Cresp
Added 09 Jun 2010
Updated 09 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where PERSUASIVE
Authors Timothy W. Bickmore, Daniel Mauer, Francisco Crespo, Thomas Brown
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