Towards the Healing Car: Investigating the Potential of Psychotherapeutic In-vehicle Interventions
METADATA ONLY
Loading...
Author / Producer
Date
2020-06-06
Publication Type
Conference Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
Citations
Altmetric
METADATA ONLY
Data
Rights / License
Abstract
The globally increasing prevalence and incident rates of mental diseases is one of the most serious public health challenges according to the World Health Organization. Today, treatment is based on professional therapies which require a high amount of financial resources and personnel effort, however IT-supported interventions in ubiquitous devices promise help and a new leverage beyond traditional therapies. We identify the car as a space for new treatments since drivers often have time and the environment in the automobile is highly controlled. In-vehicle information systems can reach people in their daily routine and could introduce innovative prevention measures. In this research in progress paper, we address the open question how the car can improve a driver’s affective state while driving. First, we thoroughly describe the design of a study we conducted to motivate other researchers for this topic. Second, we analyse 631 completed interventions collected in a 2-month field study with 10 drivers. First analyses indicate that we can positively influence the short-term affective state of drivers with at least one of ourintervention types. We provide first practical examples of how to reach the masses of everyday drivers.
Permanent link
Publication status
published
External links
Editor
Book title
ECIS 2020 Proceedings
Journal / series
Volume
Pages / Article No.
8
Publisher
Association for Information Systems
Event
28th European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS 2020) (virtual)
Edition / version
Methods
Software
Geographic location
Date collected
Date created
Subject
Mindfulness; Music; Intervention; In-vehicle information system; Field experiment; Affective states
Organisational unit
03681 - Fleisch, Elgar / Fleisch, Elgar
Notes
Research-in-Progress Papers. Due to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) the conference was conducted virtually.