Perceptions and expectations of an artificially intelligent physical activity digital assistant — A focus group study

Author:

Vandelanotte Corneel1ORCID,Hodgetts Danya1ORCID,Peris D.L.I.H.K.2ORCID,Karki Ashmita1ORCID,Maher Carol3ORCID,Imam Tasadduq4ORCID,Rashid Mamunur5ORCID,To Quyen1ORCID,Trost Stewart6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Appleton Institute Central Queensland University Rockhampton Queensland Australia

2. Department of Sport, Physical Education and Health, Faculty of Social Sciences Hong Kong Baptist University Hong Kong China

3. Allied Health and Human Performance University of South Australia Adelaide South Australia Australia

4. School of Business and Law Central Queensland University Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. School of Engineering and Technology Central Queensland University Melbourne Victoria Australia

6. School of Human Movement and Nutrition Science The University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractArtificially intelligent physical activity digital assistants that use the full spectrum of machine learning capabilities have not yet been developed and examined. This study aimed to explore potential users' perceptions and expectations of using such a digital assistant. Six 90‐min online focus group meetings (n = 45 adults) were conducted. Meetings were recorded, transcribed and thematically analysed. Participants embraced the idea of a ‘digital assistant’ providing physical activity support. Participants indicated they would like to receive notifications from the digital assistant, but did not agree on the number, timing, tone and content of notifications. Likewise, they indicated that the digital assistant's personality and appearance should be customisable. Participants understood the need to provide information to the digital assistant to allow for personalisation, but varied greatly in the extent of information that they were willing to provide. Privacy issues aside, participants embraced the idea of using artificial intelligence or machine learning in return for a more functional and personal digital assistant. In sum, participants were ready for an artificially intelligent physical activity digital assistant but emphasised a need to personalise or customise nearly every feature of the application. This poses challenges in terms of cost and complexity of developing the application.

Funder

Australian Research Council

National Health and Medical Research Council

National Heart Foundation of Australia

Publisher

Wiley

Reference40 articles.

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