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How to design Internet of Things to encourage office workers to take more regular micro-breaks

Huang, Yitong

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Authors

Yitong Huang



Abstract

Prolonged sitting at work has become a new health hazard for office workers. The current PhD is thus dedicated to exploring the potential of Internet of Things (IoT) for supporting healthier office work and break routines. An "enchanted object" approach that utilizes the "glanceability" and "gesturability" of everyday artefacts is proposed as a potential solution to tackle the challenge of user disturbance and scarcity of cognitive resources in this persuasion context. The vision is to eventually have a collection of digitally "enchanted" office objects that harness ubiquitous sensing and context-aware algorithms to subtly prompt different types of breaks at opportune moments throughout workdays, as a mechanism to break up prolonged sitting; in addition, behavioural data captured from embedded and wearable sensors will be visualized to facilitate self-reflection and habit development. An initial qualitative study is being conducted to unpack challenges and opportunities in reducing prolonged sitting in office work through the lens of both behaviour change and Human Computer Interaction, which has led to preliminary insights to share and discuss with the audience.

Citation

Huang, Y. How to design Internet of Things to encourage office workers to take more regular micro-breaks. Presented at ECCE '16: The European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics

Conference Name ECCE '16: The European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics
End Date Sep 8, 2016
Acceptance Date May 2, 2016
Publication Date Sep 5, 2016
Deposit Date Jan 25, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jan 25, 2017
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Keywords Persuasive technology; work health and wellbeing; sedentary behaviours; Internet of Things; environmental persuasion
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/819200
Publisher URL http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=2970930.2970963
Additional Information Published in: Proceeding
ECCE '16 Proceedings of the European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics, Article No. 32. New York : ACM, c2016. ISBN: 9781450342445. doi 10.1145/2970930.2970963
Contract Date Jan 25, 2017

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