Title: Development and evaluation of a Behavioural Intervention Grid: LifeGuide
1Development and evaluation of a Behavioural
Intervention GridLifeGuide
- The LifeGuide team
- Social scientists Lucy Yardley, Susan Michie,
Judith Joseph, Leanne Morrison - Computer scientists Dave de Roure, Gary Wills,
Mark Weal, Jonathon Hare
2Q What are behavioural interventions?A
Packages of advice and support for behaviour
change
- eat a healthy diet
- cope with illness
- learn parenting skills
- use less energy at home
- work more efficiently
3Traditional methods of delivering behavioural
interventions
- a) face-to-face, e.g. teacher, therapist, manager
- expert, personalised
- effective but resource intensive
- b) print format, e.g. leaflet
- generic, no support
- cheap but low impact
4Core components of effectivebehavioural
interventions
- 1. Delivering advice, tailored
- use diagnostic questions to select relevant
advice from extensive expert resources - 2. Providing longitudinal support, e.g.
- plans, reminders
- progress monitoring
- progress-relevant feedback
- social support (therapist, peers)
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7Advantages of internet-delivered interventions
- For intervention delivery include
- Cost-effective interactivity -- can automate
delivery of tailored, personalised advice and
support to huge population - Access/reach -- available 24/7, accessible from
home/work/mobile, anonymous - For intervention assessment include
- Unobtrusive detailed assessment -- can easily
collect longitudinal data on use/effects of each
intervention component in large samples
8The need for a Behavioural Intervention Grid
- Currently each internet-delivered behavioural
intervention is programmed individually, cannot
then be changed. - Developing software to allow researchers to
flexibly create and modify interventions will - a) have immediate pragmatic benefits
- b) create the potential for more rapid and
powerful development of behavioural science
9Pragmatic benefits of a behavioural intervention
grid
- Improve cost-effectiveness of research
eliminate duplication of programming - Improve access to internet-based intervention
research (e.g. to students, junior researchers) - Speed up modification/evaluation cycle, rapidly
optimise intervention
10The social science potential of a Behavioural
Intervention Grid
- Each modification/evaluation cycle tests theories
on which intervention components are based - Networks of researchers can
- a) share intervention components
- b) collaboratively collect much larger datasets
allowing mediation and moderation analyses of
effects of intervention components
11Longer-term scientific potential of a
Behavioural Intervention Grid
- Foundation for a future population laboratory
- semantically enriched, adaptive grid using
automatic data collection to continuously
model/refine interventions
12Planned work of this node
- 2 overlapping, staggered phases
- Phase 1 Develop/test software to provide
tailored advice - Phase 2 Develop/test software to support
sustained behaviour - Co-design and software development
- Pilot evaluation and software modification
- Substantive test collaborative studies
- Dissemination (throughout)
13Service Oriented Architecture
Portal interface loosely coupled set of web
services permits easy updating and integration
with other web services software
14Basis for co-design of software
- experience/prior work of team members and expert
collaborators - workshops throughout development expert and
junior researchers, different disciplines - internet consultations with networks of
behavioural researchers - systematic search of literature and internet to
identify all techniques used for delivery of
PC-based interventions
15System development
- Builds on techniques using Web for e-Science
established through - - Semantic Grid e.g. use of Resource Description
Framework - - Web 2.0 projects like myExperiment
- Builds on grid experience to support data
capture and analysis - Informs emerging practice in e-Science
for everyday research
16Pilot evaluations of LifeGuide(plus linked
studentship)
- Observational and think-aloud interview studies
of researchers and lay users experiences - explore accessibility, usability, credibility,
satisfaction, impact on behaviour - Quantitative data from 100 lay users
- patterns of usage
- responses to website questions and advice
- views of website
17Substantive test of LifeGuide 1.
- Randomise 2000 users to generic vs. tailored
advice to self-care for colds/flu - SEM analysis of cognitive mediators of outcome
- Analyse individual differences moderating outcome
18lifeguideonline.org