How can skin check reminders be personalized to patient conscientiousness"

  • Matthew Gordon Dennis (Creator)
  • Kirsten Ailsa Smith (Contributor)
  • Judith Masthoff (Contributor)
  • Nava Tintarev (Contributor)

Dataset

Description

Anonymised data from this PATH 2015 workshop paper. This paper explores the potential of personalising health reminders to melanoma patients based on their personality (high vs low conscientiousness). We describe a study where we presented participants with a scenario with a fictional patient who has not performed a skin check for recurrent melanoma. The patient was described as either very conscientious, or very unconscientious. We asked participants to rate reminders inspired by Cialdini's 6 principles of persuasion for their suitability for the patient. Participants then chose their favourite reminder and an alternative reminder to send if that one failed. We found that conscientiousness had an effect on both the ratings of reminder types and the most preferred reminders selected by participants.
Date made available1 Apr 2015
PublisherUniversity of Aberdeen
Temporal coverage24 Mar 2015 - 24 Mar 2015
Date of data production24 Mar 2015
Geographical coverageUnited States
  • How Can Skin Check Reminders be Personalised to Patient Conscientiousness?

    Dennis, M. G., Smith, K. A., Masthoff, J. & Tintarev, N., 2015, UMAP 2015 Extended Proceedings. Cristea, A., Masthoff, J., Said, A. & Tintarev, N. (eds.). CEUR-WS, Vol. 1388. 12 p. (CEUR Workshop Proceedings; vol. 1388).

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

    Open Access

Cite this