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Emotional experience with portable health devices

Authors :
Sata, K
Desmet, P
Ludden
Mathew, A
Hekkert, P
Gomez, Rafael
Popovic, Vesna
Blackler, Alethea
Sata, K
Desmet, P
Ludden
Mathew, A
Hekkert, P
Gomez, Rafael
Popovic, Vesna
Blackler, Alethea
Source :
Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Design and Emotion 2010
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

This paper reports on a six month longitudinal study exploring people’s personal and social emotional experience with health related portable interactive devices (PIDs). The focus is on emotions and how health PIDs mediate this experience in everyday contexts. The study reported here is an extension of a previous experiment conducted by the authors exploring media related PIDs [1]. The findings identified interesting aspects of health device interaction. Findings revealed people interact with health PIDs emotionally both at a personal and a social level. However, in contrast to media PIDs, participants reported significantly less social experiences than personal experiences. Nevertheless, the social level plays an important role such that negative social experiences had a significant influence on the perceived emotional experience over the course of six months. When no negative social experiences were reported the emotional experience over the course of six months became neutral. The findings are discussed in regards to their significance to the field of design, their implication for future health PID design and future research directions.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Design and Emotion 2010
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1146601881
Document Type :
Electronic Resource