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HCI and Affective Health Taking stock of a decade of studies and charting future research directions

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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HCI and Affective Health Taking stock of a decade of studies and charting future research directions. / Sanches, Pedro; Janson, Axel; Karpashevich, Pavel et al.
CHI 2019: Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference of Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York: ACM, 2019. 245.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Sanches, P, Janson, A, Karpashevich, P, Nadal, C, Qu, C, Dauden Roquet, C, Umair, M, Windlin, C, Doherty, G, Hook, K & Sas, C 2019, HCI and Affective Health Taking stock of a decade of studies and charting future research directions. in CHI 2019: Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference of Human Factors in Computing Systems., 245, ACM, New York, 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, Glasgow, United Kingdom, 4/05/19. https://doi.org/10.1145/3290605.3300475

APA

Sanches, P., Janson, A., Karpashevich, P., Nadal, C., Qu, C., Dauden Roquet, C., Umair, M., Windlin, C., Doherty, G., Hook, K., & Sas, C. (2019). HCI and Affective Health Taking stock of a decade of studies and charting future research directions. In CHI 2019: Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference of Human Factors in Computing Systems Article 245 ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/3290605.3300475

Vancouver

Sanches P, Janson A, Karpashevich P, Nadal C, Qu C, Dauden Roquet C et al. HCI and Affective Health Taking stock of a decade of studies and charting future research directions. In CHI 2019: Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference of Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York: ACM. 2019. 245 doi: 10.1145/3290605.3300475

Author

Sanches, Pedro ; Janson, Axel ; Karpashevich, Pavel et al. / HCI and Affective Health Taking stock of a decade of studies and charting future research directions. CHI 2019: Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference of Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York : ACM, 2019.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{8a45d39cb66447419a319d4b0fe871c5,
title = "HCI and Affective Health Taking stock of a decade of studies and charting future research directions",
abstract = "In the last decade, the number of articles on HCI and health has increased dramatically. We extracted 139 papers on depression, anxiety and bipolar health issues from 10 years of SIGCHI conference proceedings. 72 of these were published in the last two years. A systematic analysis of this growing body of literature revealed that most innovation happens in automated diagnosis, and self-tracking, although there are innovative ideas in tangible interfaces. We noted an overemphasis on data production without consideration of how it leads to fruitful interventions. Moreover, we see a need to promote ethical practices for involvement of people living with affective disorders. Finally, although only 16 studies evaluate technologies in a clinical context, several forms of support and intervention illustrate how rich insights are gained from evaluations with real patients. Our findings highlight potential for growth in the design space of affective health technologies.",
keywords = "affective disorders, literature review, innovation, clinical trials, ethical issues",
author = "Pedro Sanches and Axel Janson and Pavel Karpashevich and Camille Nadal and Chengcheng Qu and {Dauden Roquet}, Claudia and Muhammad Umair and Charles Windlin and Gavin Doherty and Kristina Hook and Corina Sas",
year = "2019",
month = may,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1145/3290605.3300475",
language = "English",
booktitle = "CHI 2019",
publisher = "ACM",
note = "2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, CHI '19 ; Conference date: 04-05-2019 Through 09-05-2019",
url = "https://chi2019.acm.org/",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - HCI and Affective Health Taking stock of a decade of studies and charting future research directions

AU - Sanches, Pedro

AU - Janson, Axel

AU - Karpashevich, Pavel

AU - Nadal, Camille

AU - Qu, Chengcheng

AU - Dauden Roquet, Claudia

AU - Umair, Muhammad

AU - Windlin, Charles

AU - Doherty, Gavin

AU - Hook, Kristina

AU - Sas, Corina

PY - 2019/5/4

Y1 - 2019/5/4

N2 - In the last decade, the number of articles on HCI and health has increased dramatically. We extracted 139 papers on depression, anxiety and bipolar health issues from 10 years of SIGCHI conference proceedings. 72 of these were published in the last two years. A systematic analysis of this growing body of literature revealed that most innovation happens in automated diagnosis, and self-tracking, although there are innovative ideas in tangible interfaces. We noted an overemphasis on data production without consideration of how it leads to fruitful interventions. Moreover, we see a need to promote ethical practices for involvement of people living with affective disorders. Finally, although only 16 studies evaluate technologies in a clinical context, several forms of support and intervention illustrate how rich insights are gained from evaluations with real patients. Our findings highlight potential for growth in the design space of affective health technologies.

AB - In the last decade, the number of articles on HCI and health has increased dramatically. We extracted 139 papers on depression, anxiety and bipolar health issues from 10 years of SIGCHI conference proceedings. 72 of these were published in the last two years. A systematic analysis of this growing body of literature revealed that most innovation happens in automated diagnosis, and self-tracking, although there are innovative ideas in tangible interfaces. We noted an overemphasis on data production without consideration of how it leads to fruitful interventions. Moreover, we see a need to promote ethical practices for involvement of people living with affective disorders. Finally, although only 16 studies evaluate technologies in a clinical context, several forms of support and intervention illustrate how rich insights are gained from evaluations with real patients. Our findings highlight potential for growth in the design space of affective health technologies.

KW - affective disorders

KW - literature review

KW - innovation

KW - clinical trials

KW - ethical issues

U2 - 10.1145/3290605.3300475

DO - 10.1145/3290605.3300475

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - CHI 2019

PB - ACM

CY - New York

T2 - 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

Y2 - 4 May 2019 through 9 May 2019

ER -