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Motivating physical activity at work: using persuasive social media for competitive step counting

Published:06 October 2010Publication History

ABSTRACT

Previous research has suggested that social and competitive interaction over online social networking sites could be harnessed in order to motivate behaviour change in users. This paper presents the design and in-the-wild evaluation of StepMatron, a Facebook application designed to provide social and competitive context for daily pedometer readings in order to motivate physical activity in the working environment. A study was conducted in order to determine whether interactions between users via the application more successfully motivated physical activity than simply recording daily step counts in a similar application. Ten participants (1 male), all nurses working in a UK hospital, used the application across two conditions over the course of the study. In the socially-enabled condition, participants could view each other's step data and make comparisons and comments. In the non-social condition, participants could only view their own personal step data. A significant increase in step activity was observed in the socially enabled condition. Our findings highlight the potential of social media as a means for generating positive behaviour change. They also suggest that simple mobile devices can function as an inexpensive, accessible and powerful trigger towards this behaviour change without necessitating the use of overly complex and expensive mobile applications or devices.

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      cover image ACM Other conferences
      MindTrek '10: Proceedings of the 14th International Academic MindTrek Conference: Envisioning Future Media Environments
      October 2010
      270 pages
      ISBN:9781450300117
      DOI:10.1145/1930488

      Copyright © 2010 ACM

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      Publication History

      • Published: 6 October 2010

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