Affiliation:
1. School of Information The University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA
2. Center for Health Communication, Moody College of Communication and Dell Medical School The University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA
3. Business School Hohai University Nanjing China
4. School of Information Management Wuhan University Wuhan China
Abstract
AbstractEvaluating the quality of online health information (OHI) is a major challenge facing consumers. We designed PageGraph, an interface that displays quality indicators and associated values for a webpage, based on credibility evaluation models, the nudge theory, and existing empirical research concerning professionals' and consumers' evaluation of OHI quality. A qualitative evaluation of the interface with 16 participants revealed that PageGraph rendered the information and presentation nudges as intended. It provided the participants with easier access to quality indicators, encouraged fresh angles to assess information credibility, provided an evaluation framework, and encouraged validation of initial judgments. We then conducted a quantitative evaluation of the interface involving 60 participants using a between‐subject experimental design. The control group used a regular web browser and evaluated the credibility of 12 preselected webpages, whereas the experimental group evaluated the same webpages with the assistance of PageGraph. PageGraph did not significantly influence participants' evaluation results. The results may be attributed to the insufficiency of the saliency and structure of the nudges implemented and the webpage stimuli's lack of sensitivity to the intervention. Future directions for applying nudges to support OHI evaluation were discussed.
Funder
University of Texas at Austin
Subject
Library and Information Sciences,Information Systems and Management,Computer Networks and Communications,Information Systems
Cited by
1 articles.
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