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PERSUASIVE
2010
Springer

Happier Together: Integrating a Wellness Application into a Social Network Site

14 years 5 months ago
Happier Together: Integrating a Wellness Application into a Social Network Site
What are the benefits and drawbacks of integrating health and wellness interventions into existing online social network websites? In this paper, we report on a case study of deploying the Three Good Things positive psychology exercise as a Facebook application. Our experience shows that embedding a wellness intervention in an existing social website is a viable option. In particular, we find adherence rates on par with or better than many other Internet-based wellness interventions. We also gained insights about users’ privacy and audience concerns that inform the design of social networkbased wellness applications. Participants did not want all of their entries to be shared with all their Facebook friends, both because they did not want others to know some things and because they did not want to clutter others’ newsfeeds. Users found it compelling, however, to interact with their friends around some “Good Things” they had posted.
Sean A. Munson, Debra Lauterbach, Mark W. Newman,
Added 20 Jul 2010
Updated 20 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2010
Where PERSUASIVE
Authors Sean A. Munson, Debra Lauterbach, Mark W. Newman, Paul Resnick
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