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Examining and Promoting Explainable Recommendations for Personal Sensing Technology Acceptance

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-19, 04:26 authored by J Newn, RM Kelly, S D'Alfonso, R Lederman
Personal sensing is a promising approach for enabling the delivery of timely and personalised recommendations to improve mental health and well-being. However, existing research has revealed numerous barriers to personal sensing acceptance. This paper explores the influence of explanations on the acceptability of recommendations based on personal sensing. We conducted a qualitative study using five plausible personal sensing scenarios to elicit prospective users' attitudes towards personal sensing, followed by a reflective interview. Our analysis formed six nuanced design considerations for personal sensing recommendation acceptance: user personalisation, appropriate phrasing, adaptive capability, users' confidence, peer endorsement, and sense of agency. Simultaneously, we found that the availability of an explanation at each personal sensing layer positively influenced the willingness of the participants to accept personal sensing technology. Together, this paper contributes a better understanding of how we can design personal sensing technology to be more acceptable.

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Location

New York, N.Y.

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies

Volume

6

Article number

ARTN 133

Pagination

1-27

ISSN

2474-9567

eISSN

2474-9567

Issue

3

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery

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