Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research
Date Submitted: May 11, 2020
Date Accepted: Jul 26, 2020
A Web Application About Herd Immunity Using Personalized Avatars: Development Study
ABSTRACT
Background:
Background:
âHerd immunityâ or âcommunity immunityâ refers to the reduced risk of infection among susceptible individuals in a population through the presence and proximity of immune individuals. Recent studies suggest that improving understanding of community immunity may increase intentions to get vaccinated.
Objective:
Objective:
We aimed to design a web application about community immunity and optimize it based on viewersâ cognitive and emotional responses.
Methods:
Methods:
Our multidisciplinary team developed a web application about community immunity to communicate epidemiological evidence in a personalized way. In our application, people build their own community by creating an avatar representing themselves and 8 other avatars representing people around them; for example, their family or coworkers. The application integrates these avatars in a 2-minute visualization showing how different parameters (e.g., vaccine coverage, contact within communities) influence community immunity. We predefined communication goals, created prototype visualizations, and tested four iterative versions of our visualization in a university-based human-computer interaction laboratory and community-based settings (a cafeteria, two shopping malls, a public library.) Data included psychophysiological measures (eye tracking, galvanic skin response, facial emotion recognition, electroencephalogram) to assess participantsâ cognitive and affective (emotional) responses to the visualization, and verbal reports to assess their interpretations of the visualizationâs content and messaging.
Results:
Results and analysis: Participants across all four cycles (N=110 in total) were 62% women and 35% men (4% not reported), with mean age 38 years (SD 17). Fifty-nine percent of participants reported having a university-level education. Iterative changes across the cycles included adding the ability for users to create their own avatars, specific signals about who was represented by the different avatars, using colour and movement to indicate protection or lack of protection from infectious disease, and changes to terminology to ensure clarity for people with varying educational backgrounds. Overall, we observed 3 generalizable findings. First, visualization does indeed appear to be a promising medium for conveying what community immunity is and how it works. Second, by involving multiple users in an iterative design process, it is possible to create a short and simple visualization that clearly conveys a complex topic. Third and finally, evaluating usersâ emotional responses during the design process, in addition to their cognitive responses, offers insights and findings that help inform the final design of an intervention.
Conclusions:
Conclusions:
Visualizations with personalized avatars may help people understand their individual roles in population health. Our application showed promise as a method of communicating the relationship between individual behaviour and community health. Next steps will include assessing the effects of the application on risk perception, knowledge, and vaccination intentions in a randomized controlled trial. This study offers a potential roadmap for designing health communication materials for complex topics such as community immunity.
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