Literature DB >> 33512328

Deliberative and Paternalistic Interaction Styles for Conversational Agents in Digital Health: Procedure and Validation Through a Web-Based Experiment.

Theresa Schachner1, Christoph Gross1, Andrea Hasl2,3, Florian V Wangenheim1, Tobias Kowatsch1,4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recent years have witnessed a constant increase in the number of people with chronic conditions requiring ongoing medical support in their everyday lives. However, global health systems are not adequately equipped for this extraordinarily time-consuming and cost-intensive development. Here, conversational agents (CAs) can offer easily scalable and ubiquitous support. Moreover, different aspects of CAs have not yet been sufficiently investigated to fully exploit their potential. One such trait is the interaction style between patients and CAs. In human-to-human settings, the interaction style is an imperative part of the interaction between patients and physicians. Patient-physician interaction is recognized as a critical success factor for patient satisfaction, treatment adherence, and subsequent treatment outcomes. However, so far, it remains effectively unknown how different interaction styles can be implemented into CA interactions and whether these styles are recognizable by users.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to develop an approach to reproducibly induce 2 specific interaction styles into CA-patient dialogs and subsequently test and validate them in a chronic health care context.
METHODS: On the basis of the Roter Interaction Analysis System and iterative evaluations by scientific experts and medical health care professionals, we identified 10 communication components that characterize the 2 developed interaction styles: deliberative and paternalistic interaction styles. These communication components were used to develop 2 CA variations, each representing one of the 2 interaction styles. We assessed them in a web-based between-subject experiment. The participants were asked to put themselves in the position of a patient with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. These participants were randomly assigned to interact with one of the 2 CAs and subsequently asked to identify the respective interaction style. Chi-square test was used to assess the correct identification of the CA-patient interaction style.
RESULTS: A total of 88 individuals (42/88, 48% female; mean age 31.5 years, SD 10.1 years) fulfilled the inclusion criteria and participated in the web-based experiment. The participants in both the paternalistic and deliberative conditions correctly identified the underlying interaction styles of the CAs in more than 80% of the assessments (X21,88=38.2; P<.001; phi coefficient rφ=0.68). The validation of the procedure was hence successful.
CONCLUSIONS: We developed an approach that is tailored for a medical context to induce a paternalistic and deliberative interaction style into a written interaction between a patient and a CA. We successfully tested and validated the procedure in a web-based experiment involving 88 participants. Future research should implement and test this approach among actual patients with chronic diseases and compare the results in different medical conditions. This approach can further be used as a starting point to develop dynamic CAs that adapt their interaction styles to their users. ©Theresa Schachner, Christoph Gross, Andrea Hasl, Florian v Wangenheim, Tobias Kowatsch. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 29.01.2021.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COPD; chatbots; chronic conditions; conversational agents; digital health; human-computer interaction; interaction styles, deliberative interaction; paternalistic interaction; physician-patient relationship

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33512328      PMCID: PMC7880814          DOI: 10.2196/22919

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Internet Res        ISSN: 1438-8871            Impact factor:   5.428


  47 in total

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Journal:  J Adv Nurs       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 3.187

Review 8.  Nonpharmacologic management of mixed dyslipidemia associated with diabetes mellitus and the metabolic syndrome: a review of the evidence.

Authors:  Neil J Stone
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  2008-12-22       Impact factor: 2.778

Review 9.  How does communication heal? Pathways linking clinician-patient communication to health outcomes.

Authors:  Richard L Street; Gregory Makoul; Neeraj K Arora; Ronald M Epstein
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Review 10.  Artificial Intelligence-Based Conversational Agents for Chronic Conditions: Systematic Literature Review.

Authors:  Theresa Schachner; Roman Keller; Florian V Wangenheim
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2020-09-14       Impact factor: 5.428

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  1 in total

1.  Personalization of Conversational Agent-Patient Interaction Styles for Chronic Disease Management: Two Consecutive Cross-sectional Questionnaire Studies.

Authors:  Christoph Gross; Theresa Schachner; Andrea Hasl; Dario Kohlbrenner; Christian F Clarenbach; Forian V Wangenheim; Tobias Kowatsch
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2021-05-26       Impact factor: 5.428

  1 in total

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