Thielsch Meinald T, Thielsch Carolin
Department of Psychology, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.
PeerJ. 2018 Feb 28;6:e4439. doi: 10.7717/peerj.4439. eCollection 2018.
Depression, as one of the most prevalent mental disorders, is expected to become a leading cause of disability. While evidence-based treatments are not always easily accessible, Internet-based information and self-help appears as a promising approach to improve the strained supply situation by avoiding barriers of traditional offline treatment. User experience in the domain of mental problems therefore emerges as an important research topic. The aim of our study is to investigate the impact of depressive symptoms on subjective and objective measures of web user experience.
In this two-part online study ( = 721) we investigate the relationship between depressive symptoms of web users and basic website characteristics (i.e., content, subjective and objective usability, aesthetics). Participants completed search and memory tasks on different fully-functional websites. In addition, they were asked to evaluate the given websites with standardized measures and were screened for symptoms of depression using the PHQ-9. We used structural equation modeling (SEM) to determine whether depression severity affects users' perception of and performance in using information websites.
We found significant associations between depressive symptoms and subjective user experience, specifically of website content, usability, and aesthetics, as well as an effect of content perception on the overall appraisal of a website in terms of the intention to visit it again. Small yet significant negative effects of depression severity on all named subjective website evaluations were revealed, leading to an indirect negative effect on the intention to revisit a website via impaired content perceptions. However, objective task performance was not influenced by depressiveness of users.
Depression emerges as capable of altering the subjective perception of a website to some extend with respect to the main features content, usability, and aesthetics. The user experience of a website is crucial, especially as it facilitates revisiting a website and thus might be relevant in avoiding drop-out in online interventions. Thus, the biased impression of persons affected by symptoms of depression and resulting needs of those users should be considered when designing and evaluating E-(Mental)-Health-platforms. The high prevalence of some mental disorders such as depression in the general population stresses the need for further investigations of the found effects.
抑郁症作为最常见的精神障碍之一,预计将成为导致残疾的主要原因。虽然循证治疗并非总是容易获得,但基于互联网的信息和自助似乎是一种有前景的方法,可通过避免传统线下治疗的障碍来改善紧张的供应状况。因此,心理问题领域的用户体验成为一个重要的研究课题。我们研究的目的是调查抑郁症状对网络用户体验的主观和客观指标的影响。
在这项分为两部分的在线研究(n = 721)中,我们调查了网络用户的抑郁症状与基本网站特征(即内容、主观和客观可用性、美学)之间的关系。参与者在不同的全功能网站上完成搜索和记忆任务。此外,他们被要求使用标准化量表对给定网站进行评估,并使用PHQ-9筛查抑郁症状。我们使用结构方程模型(SEM)来确定抑郁严重程度是否会影响用户对信息网站的使用感知和表现。
我们发现抑郁症状与主观用户体验之间存在显著关联,特别是在网站内容、可用性和美学方面,以及内容感知对网站整体评价(就再次访问的意愿而言)的影响。抑郁严重程度对所有上述主观网站评价产生了虽小但显著的负面影响,通过受损的内容感知对再次访问网站的意愿产生间接负面影响。然而,客观任务表现不受用户抑郁程度的影响。
抑郁症在一定程度上能够改变对网站主要特征(内容、可用性和美学)的主观感知。网站的用户体验至关重要,特别是因为它有助于再次访问网站,因此可能与避免在线干预中的退出有关。因此,在设计和评估电子(心理)健康平台时,应考虑受抑郁症状影响者的偏差印象以及这些用户由此产生的需求。一般人群中抑郁症等一些精神障碍的高患病率强调了对所发现效应进行进一步研究的必要性。