Why Users Comply with Wearables: The Role of Contextual Self-Efficacy in Behavioral Change

Wearables provide great opportunities for improving personal health, but research challenges their capacity to evoke behavioral change effectively. Realizing the full potential of wearables requires a better understanding of users' behavior change processes. Based on self-efficacy theory, we in...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational journal of human-computer interaction Vol. 37; no. 3; pp. 281 - 294
Main Authors Rieder, Annamina, Eseryel, U. Yeliz, Lehrer, Christiane, Jung, Reinhard
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Norwood Taylor & Francis 07.02.2021
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc
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ISSN1044-7318
1532-7590
1044-7318
DOI10.1080/10447318.2020.1819669

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Summary:Wearables provide great opportunities for improving personal health, but research challenges their capacity to evoke behavioral change effectively. Realizing the full potential of wearables requires a better understanding of users' behavior change processes. Based on self-efficacy theory, we investigate how wearables influence users' perceptions of their self-efficacy and subsequent health behavior. Using narrative interviews with twenty-five long-term wearable users, we show that wearables can have both positive and negative effects on users' perceptions of their self-efficacy and that these perceptions are subject to internal and external contexts, which can positively or negatively affect users' compliance. We also find that the internal context may have a compounding or neutralizing effect on self-efficacy, despite an adverse external context. Our study shows the contextual and transient nature of self-efficacy, thus contributing to self-efficacy theory and research on wearables and offering practical design implications.
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ISSN:1044-7318
1532-7590
1044-7318
DOI:10.1080/10447318.2020.1819669