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Breeze, ein spielerisches Biofeedback Atemtraining für das Smartphone: Physiologische Reaktionen und subjektive Einschätzungen aus einem Labor- und Online-Experiment
(2021)Hintergrund: Langsames Atmen hat eine positive Wirkung auf die Herzfunktion und auf das psychische Wohlbefinden. Daher werden entsprechende Atemübungen oft bei chronischen Krankheiten empfohlen; sie werden allerdings aus verschiedenen Gründen nur von bestimmten Personengruppen ausgeübt und haben somit eine eingeschränkte Reichweite und Wirkung. Ziel: Die Breeze App verfolgt das Ziel, die Reichweite von Atemübungen mit einem spielerischen ...Conference Poster -
Smartphone-based Biofeedback Breathing Training for Stress Management
(2018)Applied Machine Learning DaysConference Poster -
Therapy Adherence of Obese Children in a 6-Month High-Frequency Intervention
(2017)Conference Poster -
Ally: A Smartphone-based Physical Activity Intervention
(2017)No behavior has an impact on human health as great as physical activity (PA). We therefore developed Ally, a smartphone-based 6-week PA intervention. Ally seeks to exploit the ubiquity and sensing capabilities of mobile phones to adapt the provision of PA interventions to the context of the user. In this research we investigate the following research questions: (1) What are effective components of Ally, a mHealth physical activity ...Conference Poster -
Smartphone-based Cough and Sleep Quality Detection
(2018)We are investigating to which degree of accuracy can a mobile application detect asthmatic nocturnal cough and sleep quality with the smartphone’s built-in microphone?Conference Poster -
Nocturnal cough and sleep quality to assess asthma control and predict attacks
(2020)Conference Poster -
Characteristics of asthma-related nocturnal cough – a potential new digital biomarker
(2020)Conference Poster -
Development of a mindfulness and relaxation app and evaluation of the effectiveness on cancer patients’ distress: a randomized controlled multicenter stud
(2021)Background: Mind-body interventions have the potential to reduce cancer patients’ distress during initial care and rehabilitation, but access to face-to-face interventions is often limited due to entry barriers such as geographical distance, time, financial constraints, or lack of service providers, or due to rules on hygiene and social distancing such as those associated with the recent COVID- 19 pandemic. Mobile applications (apps) can ...Conference Poster