Data supporting the publication of "The Role of Aesthetics in Intentions to Use Digital Health Interventions".
Data supporting the publication of "The Role of Aesthetics in Intentions to Use Digital Health Interventions".
Data supporting the publication of "The Role of Aesthetics in Intentions to Use Digital Health Interventions". PLOS Digital Health (in press)
Digital interventions are increasingly recognised as a cost-effective treatment solution for a number of health concerns, but adoption and use of these interventions can be low, affecting outcomes. This research sought to identify how individual aesthetic facets and perceived trust may influence perceptions toward and intentions to use an online health intervention by building on the Technology Acceptance Model, where perceived attractiveness, perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use and perceived enjoyment are thought to predict behavioural intentions towards a website. An online questionnaire study assessed perceptions of nine stimuli varying in four aesthetics facets (simplicity, diversity, colour & craftsmanship) in three participant groups: individuals from the general population who were shown stimuli referring to general health (GP-H) (N=257); individuals experiencing an eating disorder and shown stimuli referring to eating disorders (ED-ED) (N=109); and individuals from the general population who were shown stimuli referring to eating disorders (GP-ED) (N=235).
Digital health, Engagement, aesthetics
University of Southampton
Denison-Day, James
49c0d012-eadc-44eb-b06c-da7714be145a
Denison-Day, James
49c0d012-eadc-44eb-b06c-da7714be145a
Denison-Day, James
(2022)
Data supporting the publication of "The Role of Aesthetics in Intentions to Use Digital Health Interventions".
University of Southampton
doi:10.5258/SOTON/D2404
[Dataset]
Abstract
Data supporting the publication of "The Role of Aesthetics in Intentions to Use Digital Health Interventions". PLOS Digital Health (in press)
Digital interventions are increasingly recognised as a cost-effective treatment solution for a number of health concerns, but adoption and use of these interventions can be low, affecting outcomes. This research sought to identify how individual aesthetic facets and perceived trust may influence perceptions toward and intentions to use an online health intervention by building on the Technology Acceptance Model, where perceived attractiveness, perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use and perceived enjoyment are thought to predict behavioural intentions towards a website. An online questionnaire study assessed perceptions of nine stimuli varying in four aesthetics facets (simplicity, diversity, colour & craftsmanship) in three participant groups: individuals from the general population who were shown stimuli referring to general health (GP-H) (N=257); individuals experiencing an eating disorder and shown stimuli referring to eating disorders (ED-ED) (N=109); and individuals from the general population who were shown stimuli referring to eating disorders (GP-ED) (N=235).
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Published date: 8 October 2022
Keywords:
Digital health, Engagement, aesthetics
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Local EPrints ID: 476899
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476899
PURE UUID: 5ffef0d1-3f37-4ce5-afd8-5c0e24b813fd
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Date deposited: 19 May 2023 16:30
Last modified: 19 Sep 2024 01:55
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