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Flowers or a robot army?: encouraging awareness & activity with personal, mobile displays
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Source
UbiComp; Vol. 344 archive
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Ubiquitous computing table of contents
Seoul, Korea
SESSION: Portable and wearable table of contents
Pages 54-63  
Year of Publication: 2008
ISBN:978-1-60558-136-1
Authors
Sunny Consolvo  Intel Research Seattle, Seattle, WA and University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Predrag Klasnja  University of Washington, Seattle, WA
David W. McDonald  University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Daniel Avrahami  Intel Research Seattle, Seattle, WA
Jon Froehlich  University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Louis LeGrand  Intel Research Seattle, Seattle, WA
Ryan Libby  University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Keith Mosher  University of Washington, Seattle, WA
James A. Landay  Intel Research Seattle, Seattle, WA and University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

Personal, mobile displays, such as those on mobile phones, are ubiquitous, yet for the most part, underutilized. We present results from a field experiment that investigated the effectiveness of these displays as a means for improving awareness of daily life (in our case, self-monitoring of physical activity). Twenty-eight participants in three experimental conditions used our UbiFit system for a period of three months in their day-to-day lives over the winter holiday season. Our results show, for example, that participants who had an awareness display were able to maintain their physical activity level (even during the holidays), while the level of physical activity for participants who did not have an awareness display dropped significantly. We discuss our results and their general implications for the use of everyday mobile devices as awareness displays.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
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2
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CITED BY  7

Collaborative Colleagues:
Sunny Consolvo: colleagues
Predrag Klasnja: colleagues
David W. McDonald: colleagues
Daniel Avrahami: colleagues
Jon Froehlich: colleagues
Louis LeGrand: colleagues
Ryan Libby: colleagues
Keith Mosher: colleagues
James A. Landay: colleagues