Authors
Eun Kyoung Choe, Bongshin Lee, Sean Munson, Wanda Pratt, Julie A Kientz
Publication date
2013
Journal
AMIA annual symposium proceedings
Volume
2013
Pages
825
Publisher
American Medical Informatics Association
Description
Self-monitoring technologies have proliferated in recent years as they offer excellent potential for promoting healthy behaviors. Although these technologies have varied ways of providing real-time feedback on a user’s current progress, we have a dearth of knowledge of the framing effects on the performance feedback these tools provide. With an aim to create influential, persuasive performance feedback that will nudge people toward healthy behaviors, we conducted an online experiment to investigate the effect of framing on an individual’s self-efficacy. We identified 3 different types of framing that can be applicable in presenting performance feedback:(1) the valence of performance (remaining vs. achieved framing),(2) presentation type (text-only vs. text with visual), and (3) data unit (raw vs. percentage). Results show that the achieved framing could lead to an increased perception of individual’s performance …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
EK Choe, B Lee, S Munson, W Pratt, JA Kientz - AMIA annual symposium proceedings, 2013