Abstract is missing.
- Meeting people where they areBrenda Laurel. 1 [doi]
- Understanding persuasive software functionality in practice: a field trial of polar FT60Marja Harjumaa, Katarina Segerståhl, Harri Oinas-Kukkonen. 2 [doi]
- Towards a handy interactive persuasive diary for teenagers with a diagnosis of autismAnja Meiland Ranfelt, Tony Wigram, Peter Øhrstrøm. 3 [doi]
- A persuasive interactive mannequin for shop windowsWolfgang Reitberger, Alexander Meschtscherjakov, Thomas Mirlacher, Thomas Scherndl, H. Huber, Manfred Tscheligi. 4 [doi]
- Influencing interaction: development of the design with intent methodDan Lockton, David Harrison, Tim Holley, Neville A. Stanton. 5 [doi]
- Design methods for ethical persuasive computingJanet Davis. 6 [doi]
- Designing empathic computers: the effect of multimodal empathic feedback using animated agentHien Nguyen, Judith Masthoff. 7 [doi]
- Goal-setting considerations for persuasive technologies that encourage physical activitySunny Consolvo, Predrag V. Klasnja, David W. McDonald, James A. Landay. 8 [doi]
- Understanding user cognitions to guide the tailoring of persuasive technology-based physical activity interventionsJoyca Lacroix, Privender Saini, Annelies Goris. 9 [doi]
- Hallym Jikimi 3:::rd::: system: web-based monitoring for u-health care serviceYong-Joong Kim, Kyung-Kwon Jung, Seon Woo Lee, Gyu Moon, Dong-Sik Shin, Ho-Youl Kang. 10 [doi]
- Designing for persuasion: mobile services for health behavior changeSunny Consolvo, Kendra Markle, Kevin Patrick, Kara Chanasyk. 11 [doi]
- Using negative and positive social feedback from a robotic agent to save energyCees Midden, Jaap Ham. 12 [doi]
- Using individual, social and economic persuasion techniques to reduce CO::2:: emissions in a family settingMiyuki Shiraishi, Yasuyuki Washio, Chihiro Takayama, Vili Lehdonvirta, Hiroaki Kimura, Tatsuo Nakajima. 13 [doi]
- Climate persuasive services: changing behavior towards low-carbon lifestylesJorge Luis Zapico, Marko Turpeinen, Nils Brandt. 14 [doi]
- Does it make a difference who tells you what to do?: exploring the effect of social agency on psychological reactanceMaaike Roubroeks, Cees Midden, Jaap Ham. 15 [doi]
- Subtle persuasion: the unobtrusive effect of website-banner congruence on trustPeter de Vries, Thomas J. L. van Rompay. 16 [doi]
- Communication-based influence components modelBrian Cugelman, Mike Thelwall, Phil Dawes. 17 [doi]
- Three possible futures for persuasive technologyB. J. Fogg. 18 [doi]
- New metrics for liquid mediaMartha G. Russell. 19 [doi]
- Buzz, fuzz and numbers that really matterBlaine Baggett. 20 [doi]
- The screen consumption quotientNeal M. Burns. 21 [doi]
- The power scoreMaury Giles. 22 [doi]
- Lifestyle mappingLouis-David Mangin. 23 [doi]
- The community health indexMichael Wu. 24 [doi]
- Persuading users through counseling dialogue with a conversational agentDaniel Schulman, Timothy W. Bickmore. 25 [doi]
- show-me : water consumption at a glance to promote water conservation in the showerKarin Kappel, Thomas Grechenig. 26 [doi]
- The persuasive qualities of mapsLouise Nørgaard Glud, Anders Albrechtslund, Henrik Harder. 27 [doi]
- Organizational transformation: a new application of persuasive technologyWilliam Seidman, Michael McCauley. 28 [doi]
- Can ambient persuasive technology persuade unconsciously?: using subliminal feedback to influence energy consumption ratings of household appliancesJaap Ham, Cees Midden, Femke Beute. 29 [doi]
- Persuasive system design: state of the art and future directionsKristian Tørning, Harri Oinas-Kukkonen. 30 [doi]
- GuideView: a system for developing structured, multimodal, multi-platform persuasive applicationsM. Sriram Iyengar, Jose F. Florez-Arango, Carlos A. Garcia. 31 [doi]
- ::::e::::Psychology: a pilot study on how to enhance social support and adherence in digital interventions by characteristics from social networking sitesElin Olsen, Pål Kraft. 32 [doi]
- Self-setting of physical activity goals and effects on perceived difficulty, importance and competencePrivender Saini, Joyca Lacroix. 33 [doi]
- Geocaching in a persuasive perspectiveLasse Burri Gram-Hansen. 34 [doi]
- Factors that persuade continued use of Facebook among new membersSusan Shepherd Ferebee, James Wayne Davis. 35 [doi]
- The portal monitor: a privacy-enhanced event-driven system for elder careJohn Duncan, L. Jean Camp, William R. Hazelwood. 36 [doi]
- Designing games to motivate physical activityShlomo Berkovsky, Dipak Bhandari, Stephen Kimani, Nathalie Colineau, Cécile Paris. 37 [doi]
- 10 uses of texting to improve healthB. J. Fogg, Enrique Allen. 38 [doi]
- Designing for video engagement on social networks: a video marketing case studyNikki Serapio, B. J. Fogg. 39 [doi]
- A behavior model for persuasive designB. J. Fogg. 40 [doi]
- Generating a sense of community in a graduate educational setting through persuasive technologyDaniel Firpo, Sumonta Kasemvilas, Peter Ractham, Xuesong Zhang. 41 [doi]
- The Behavior Grid: 35 ways behavior can changeB. J. Fogg. 42 [doi]
- The role of individualization in ::::e::::Psychology interventionsP. Kraft. 43 [doi]
- Creating persuasive technologies: an eight-step design processB. J. Fogg. 44 [doi]
- A theory-based framework for evaluating exergames as persuasive technologyMarc A. Adams, Simon J. Marshall, Lindsay Dillon, Susan Caparosa, Ernesto Ramirez, Justin Phillips, Greg J. Norman. 45 [doi]
- Social influence of a persuasive agent: the role of agent embodiment and evaluative feedbackSuzanne Vossen, Jaap Ham, Cees Midden. 46 [doi]