Assistive Conversational Agent for Health Coaching : a Validation Study

dc.contributor.authorFadhil, Ahmed
dc.contributor.authorWang, Yunlong
dc.contributor.authorReiterer, Harald
dc.date.accessioned2019-05-27T15:01:10Z
dc.date.available2019-05-27T15:01:10Z
dc.date.issued2019-07-05
dc.description.abstractObjectiv: Poor lifestyle represents a health risk factor and is the leading cause of morbidity and chronic conditions. The impact of poor lifestyle can be significantly altered by individual's behavioral modification. Although there are abundant lifestyle promotion applications and tools, they are still limited in providing tailored social support that goes beyond their predefined functionalities. In addition, virtual coaching approaches are still unable to handle user emotional needs. Our approach presents a human-virtual agent mediated system that leverages the conversational agent to handle menial caregiver's works by engaging users (e.g., patients) in a conversation with the conversational agent. The dialog used a natural conversation to interact with users, delivered by the conversational agent and handled with a finite state machine automaton. Our research differs from existing approaches that replace a human coach with a fully automated assistant on user support. The methodology allows users to interact with the technology and access health-related interventions. To assist physicians, the conversational agent gives weighting to user's adherence, based on prior defined conditions.

Materials and Methods: This article describes the design and validation of CoachAI, a conversational agent-assisted health coaching system to support health intervention delivery to individuals or groups. CoachAI instantiates a text-based health care conversational agent system that bridges the remote human coach and the users.

Results: We will discuss our approach and highlight the outcome of a 1-month validation study on physical activity, healthy diet, and stress coping. The study validates technology aspects of our human–virtual agent mediated health coaching system. We present the intervention settings and findings from the study. In addition, we present some user-experience validation results gathered during or after the experimentation.

Conclusions: The study provided a set of dimensions when building a human–conversational agent powered health intervention tool. The results provided interesting insights when using human–conversational agent mediated approach in health coaching systems. The findings revealed that users who were highly engaged were also more adherent to conversational-agent activities. This research made key contributions to the literature on techniques in providing social, yet tailored health coaching support: (1) identifying habitual patterns to understand user preferences; (2) the role of a conversational agent in delivering health promoting microactivities; (3) building the technology while adhering to individuals' daily messaging routine; and (4) a socio-technical system that fits with the role of conversational agent as an assistive component.

Future Work: Future improvements will consider building the activity recommender based on users' interaction data and integrating users' dietary pattern and emotional wellbeing into the initial user clustering by leveraging information and communication technology approaches (e.g., machine learning). We will integrate a sentiment analysis capability to gather further data about individuals and report these data to the caregiver.
eng
dc.description.versionpublishedeng
dc.identifier.doi10.1055/s-0039-1688757eng
dc.identifier.pmid31117129eng
dc.identifier.ppn1691259128
dc.identifier.urihttps://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/45918
dc.language.isoengeng
dc.rightsterms-of-use
dc.rights.urihttps://rightsstatements.org/page/InC/1.0/
dc.subjectHealth coaching, conversational agent, validation study, physical activity, healthy diet, mental wellnesseng
dc.subject.ddc004eng
dc.titleAssistive Conversational Agent for Health Coaching : a Validation Studyeng
dc.typeJOURNAL_ARTICLEeng
dspace.entity.typePublication
kops.citation.bibtex
@article{Fadhil2019-07-05Assis-45918,
  year={2019},
  doi={10.1055/s-0039-1688757},
  title={Assistive Conversational Agent for Health Coaching : a Validation Study},
  number={1},
  volume={58},
  issn={0026-1270},
  journal={Methods of information in medicine},
  pages={009--023},
  author={Fadhil, Ahmed and Wang, Yunlong and Reiterer, Harald}
}
kops.citation.iso690FADHIL, Ahmed, Yunlong WANG, Harald REITERER, 2019. Assistive Conversational Agent for Health Coaching : a Validation Study. In: Methods of information in medicine. 2019, 58(1), pp. 009-023. ISSN 0026-1270. eISSN 2511-705X. Available under: doi: 10.1055/s-0039-1688757deu
kops.citation.iso690FADHIL, Ahmed, Yunlong WANG, Harald REITERER, 2019. Assistive Conversational Agent for Health Coaching : a Validation Study. In: Methods of information in medicine. 2019, 58(1), pp. 009-023. ISSN 0026-1270. eISSN 2511-705X. Available under: doi: 10.1055/s-0039-1688757eng
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    <dcterms:abstract xml:lang="eng">Objectiv: Poor lifestyle represents a health risk factor and is the leading cause of morbidity and chronic conditions. The impact of poor lifestyle can be significantly altered by individual's behavioral modification. Although there are abundant lifestyle promotion applications and tools, they are still limited in providing tailored social support that goes beyond their predefined functionalities. In addition, virtual coaching approaches are still unable to handle user emotional needs. Our approach presents a human-virtual agent mediated system that leverages the conversational agent to handle menial caregiver's works by engaging users (e.g., patients) in a conversation with the conversational agent. The dialog used a natural conversation to interact with users, delivered by the conversational agent and handled with a finite state machine automaton. Our research differs from existing approaches that replace a human coach with a fully automated assistant on user support. The methodology allows users to interact with the technology and access health-related interventions. To assist physicians, the conversational agent gives weighting to user's adherence, based on prior defined conditions.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Materials and Methods: This article describes the design and validation of CoachAI, a conversational agent-assisted health coaching system to support health intervention delivery to individuals or groups. CoachAI instantiates a text-based health care conversational agent system that bridges the remote human coach and the users.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Results: We will discuss our approach and highlight the outcome of a 1-month validation study on physical activity, healthy diet, and stress coping. The study validates technology aspects of our human–virtual agent mediated health coaching system. We present the intervention settings and findings from the study. In addition, we present some user-experience validation results gathered during or after the experimentation.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Conclusions: The study provided a set of dimensions when building a human–conversational agent powered health intervention tool. The results provided interesting insights when using human–conversational agent mediated approach in health coaching systems. The findings revealed that users who were highly engaged were also more adherent to conversational-agent activities. This research made key contributions to the literature on techniques in providing social, yet tailored health coaching support: (1) identifying habitual patterns to understand user preferences; (2) the role of a conversational agent in delivering health promoting microactivities; (3) building the technology while adhering to individuals' daily messaging routine; and (4) a socio-technical system that fits with the role of conversational agent as an assistive component.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Future Work: Future improvements will consider building the activity recommender based on users' interaction data and integrating users' dietary pattern and emotional wellbeing into the initial user clustering by leveraging information and communication technology approaches (e.g., machine learning). We will integrate a sentiment analysis capability to gather further data about individuals and report these data to the caregiver.</dcterms:abstract>
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