Published on in Vol 16, No 6 (2014): June

Designing for Psychological Change: Individuals’ Reward and Cost Valuations in Weight Management

Designing for Psychological Change: Individuals’ Reward and Cost Valuations in Weight Management

Designing for Psychological Change: Individuals’ Reward and Cost Valuations in Weight Management

Authors of this article:

Anne Hsu1 ;   Ann Blandford2 Author Orcid Image

Journals

  1. Trilk J, Kennedy A. Using Lifestyle Medicine in U.S. Health Care to Treat Obesity. Current Sports Medicine Reports 2015;14(2):96 View
  2. Blandford A, Furniss D, Makri S. Qualitative HCI Research: Going Behind the Scenes. Synthesis Lectures on Human-Centered Informatics 2016;9(1):1 View
  3. Webb V, Wadden T. Intensive Lifestyle Intervention for Obesity: Principles, Practices, and Results. Gastroenterology 2017;152(7):1752 View
  4. Martins C, Dutton G, Hunter G, Gower B. Revisiting the Compensatory Theory as an explanatory model for relapse in obesity management. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2020;112(5):1170 View
  5. Laurie J, Blandford A. Making time for mindfulness. International Journal of Medical Informatics 2016;96:38 View
  6. Langan A, Bader A, Goedkoop S, Cummings S, Tsikitas M, Nogueira I, Campoverde Reyes K, Stanford F. A longitudinal study to investigate the effects of a 12-week comprehensive lifestyle weight management program on body weight and quality of life. Clinical Nutrition ESPEN 2020;40:125 View
  7. Pinto da Costa M. An Intervention to Connect Patients With Psychosis and Volunteers via Smartphone (the Phone Pal): Development Study. JMIR Formative Research 2022;6(6):e35086 View