A computational cognitive model of self-efficacy and daily adherence in mHealth

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Abstract

Mobile health (mHealth) applications provide an excellent opportunity for collecting rich, fine-grained data necessary for understanding and predicting day-to-day health behavior change dynamics. A computational predictive model (ACT-R-DStress) is presented and fit to individual daily adherence in 28-day mHealth exercise programs. The ACT-R-DStress model refines the psychological construct of self-efficacy. To explain and predict the dynamics of self-efficacy and predict individual performance of targeted behaviors, the self-efficacy construct is implemented as a theory-based neurocognitive simulation of the interaction of behavioral goals, memories of past experiences, and behavioral performance.

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APA

Pirolli, P. (2016). A computational cognitive model of self-efficacy and daily adherence in mHealth. Translational Behavioral Medicine, 6(4), 496–508. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13142-016-0391-y

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