PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
Tytuł artykułu

Having Avatar Nestle to User through Dialogues to Develop Exercise Habits with Intention Maintained

Wybrane pełne teksty z tego czasopisma
Identyfikatory
Warianty tytułu
Konferencja
Federated Conference on Computer Science and Information Systems (16 ; 02-05.09.2021 ; online)
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Continuation and habituation of exercises are in preventing lifestyle-related diseases. However, existing habituation applications fail to address mental factors of individual users. This study proposes a method to support habituation of exercise. It makes the best use of an accompanying avatars assigned to users according to their motivation. The avatar dialogues with a user every day. It proposes a goal based on the intention level and the current goal achievement of the user. It also shares the results of the analysis on collected data with the user at regular intervals. This method enables the user to continue the daily exercise easily. From the group of pre-survey subjects, we obtained 2 kinds of groups. We created avatars based on each group to verify their effectiveness. We found that the avatars have improved the goal achievements of the subjects.
Rocznik
Tom
Strony
43--52
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 22 poz., tab., il.
Twórcy
autor
  • Graduate School of Information Science and Engineering, Ritsumeikan University, Japan
  • Connect Dot Ltd., Japan
  • Graduate School of Information Science and Engineering, Ritsumeikan University, Japan
  • Connect Dot Ltd., Japan
  • Graduate School of Information Science and Engineering, Ritsumeikan University, Japan
Bibliografia
  • 1. Arora, Charu, et al. Development and validation of health education tools and evaluation questionnaires for improving patient care in lifestyle related diseases. Journal of clinical and diagnostic research: JCDR, 2017, 11.5: JE06.
  • 2. Manson, Joann E., et al. Physical activity and incidence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in women. The Lancet, 1991, 338.8770: 774-778.
  • 3. Paffenbarger Jr, Ralph S., et al. The association of changes in physical-activity level and other lifestyle characteristics with mortality among men. New England journal of medicine, 1993, 328.8: 538-545.
  • 4. Stawarz, Katarzyna; COX, Anna L.; BLANDFORD, Ann. Beyond self-tracking and reminders: designing smartphone apps that support habit formation. In: Proceedings of the 33rd annual ACM conference on human factors in computing systems. 2015. p. 2653-2662.
  • 5. World Health Organization. Global action plan on physical activity 2018-2030: more active people for a healthier world. World Health Organization, 2019.
  • 6. Pintrich, Paul R., et al. A manual for the use of the Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire (MSLQ). 1991.
  • 7. Takamura, Hiroya; Inui, Takashi; Okumura, Manabu. Extracting semantic orientations of words using spin model. In: Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL 05). 2005. p. 133-140.
  • 8. Locke, Edwin A.; Latham, Gary P. Building a practically useful theory of goal setting and task motivation: A 35-year odyssey. American psychologist, 2002, 57.9: 705.
  • 9. Lally, Phillippa, et al. How are habits formed: Modelling habit formation in the real world. European journal of social psychology, 2010, 40.6: 998-1009.
  • 10. Kaushal, Navin; Rhodes, Ryan E. Exercise habit formation in new gym members: a longitudinal study. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 2015, 38.4: 652-663.
  • 11. Mazzotta, Irene; de Rosis, Fiorella; Carofiglio, Valeria. Portia: A user-adapted persuasion system in the healthy-eating domain. IEEE Intelligent systems, 2007, 22.6: 42-51.
  • 12. Carnevale, Peter JD; Isen, Alice M. The influence of positive affect and visual access on the discovery of integrative solutions in bilateral negotiation. Organizational behavior and human decision Processes, 1986, 37.1: 1-13.
  • 13. Forgas, Joseph P. On feeling good and getting your way: Mood effects on negotiator cognition and bargaining strategies. Journal of personality and social psychology, 1998, 74.3: 565.
  • 14. Reeves, Byron; Nass, Clifford. The media equation: How people treat computers, television, and new media like real people. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge university press, 1996.
  • 15. Fitzpatrick, Kathleen Kara; Darcy, Alison; Vierhile, Molly. Delivering cognitive behavior therapy to young adults with symptoms of depression and anxiety using a fully automated conversational agent (Woebot): a randomized controlled trial. JMIR mental health, 2017, 4.2: e19.
  • 16. Morris, Jeremy N.; Hardman, Adrianne E. Walking to health. Sports medicine, 1997, 23.5: 306-332.
  • 17. OGILVIE, David, et al. Interventions to promote walking: systematic review. bmj, 2007, 334.7605: 1204.
  • 18. https://www.mhlw.go.jp/content/10900000/000687163.pdf
  • 19. LINE,LINE | always at your side. https://line.me/en/.
  • 20. Zoom,Zoom Meetings - Zoom. https://zoom.us/meetings.
  • 21. Telegram, Telegram Messenger. https://telegram.org/.
  • 22. Elasticsearch, Elasticsearch: The Official Distributed Search & Analytics Engine | Elastic. https://www.elastic.co/elasticsearch/.
Uwagi
1. Preface
2. Session: 15th International Symposium Advances in Artificial Intelligence and Applications
3. Communication Papers
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-38aa4376-365b-4d8b-9abd-69ec43813f6f
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.