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Towards Design Guidelines for Effective Health-Related Data Videos: An Empirical Investigation of Affect, Personality, and Video Content
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Abstract
Data Videos (DVs), or animated infographics that tell stories with data, are becoming increasingly popular. Despite their potential to induce attitude change, little is explored about how to produce effective DVs. This paper describes two studies that explored factors linked to the potential of health DVs to improve viewers’ behavioural change intentions. We investigated: 1) how viewers’ affect is linked to their behavioural change intentions; 2) how these affect are linked to the viewers’ personality traits; 3) which attributes of DVs are linked to their persuasive potential. Results from both studies indicated that viewers’ negative affect lowered their behavioural change intentions. Individuals with higher neuroticism exhibited higher negative affect and were harder to convince. Finally, Study 2 proved that providing any solutions to the health problem, presented in the DV, made the viewers perceive the videos as more actionable while lowering their negative affect, and importantly, induced higher behavioural change intentions.
Video
Publisher Link
https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3491102.3517727
Citation
Sallam S, Sakamoto Y, Leboe-McGowan J, Latulipe C, Irani P. Towards Design Guidelines for Effective Health-Related Data Videos: An Empirical Investigation of Affect, Personality, and Video Content. Proceedings of the 2022 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems.
Bibtext Entry
@inproceedings{10.1145/3491102.3517727,
author = {Sallam, Samar and Sakamoto, Yumiko and Leboe-McGowan, Jason and Latulipe, Celine and Irani, Pourang},
title = {Towards Design Guidelines for Effective Health-Related Data Videos: An Empirical Investigation of Affect, Personality, and Video Content},
year = {2022},
isbn = {9781450391573},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3491102.3517727},
doi = {10.1145/3491102.3517727},
abstract = { Data Videos (DVs), or animated infographics that tell stories with data, are becoming increasingly popular. Despite their potential to induce attitude change, little is explored about how to produce effective DVs. This paper describes two studies that explored factors linked to the potential of health DVs to improve viewers’ behavioural change intentions. We investigated: 1) how viewers’ affect is linked to their behavioural change intentions; 2) how these affect are linked to the viewers’ personality traits; 3) which attributes of DVs are linked to their persuasive potential. Results from both studies indicated that viewers’ negative affect lowered their behavioural change intentions. Individuals with higher neuroticism exhibited higher negative affect and were harder to convince. Finally, Study 2 proved that providing any solutions to the health problem, presented in the DV, made the viewers perceive the videos as more actionable while lowering their negative affect, and importantly, induced higher behavioural change intentions. },
booktitle = {CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems},
articleno = {342},
numpages = {22},
keywords = {attitude change, physical activity, data storytelling, actionable, solution, personality, narrative visualization, affect, persuasive technology, Data Video},
location = {New Orleans, LA, USA},
series = {CHI '22}
}
Authors
Samar Sallam
AlumniDr. Yumiko Sakamoto
Senior Research Associate at University of British ColumbiaCeline Latulipe
ProfessorPourang Irani
ProfessorCanada Research Chair
at University of British Columbia Okanagan Campus