1. Enabling HIV Prevention Among MSM: A Role for HCI Beyond Intervening Towards Enabling Safer Experiences
2. My perspective Behavior Application to Design Systems Viewpoint
3. My perspective: A “New World” Framing “The role of HIV prevention is not to interfere with where people meet, where they have sex or how they have sex – with one exception, and that is to advise people how to have safer sex” B. Henriksson and S.A. Mansson “What behavior do we want to “Enable”? When? And Where” (adapted from Heath & Heath, 2010) Responding to actual decision-making behaviors
4. “Harnessing the promise of the Internet” (Stryker, 2010) Behavioral Change Computer-mediated communication (CMC) Considerations of design & evaluation
5. Game Changes in Disclosure Behaviors??? Some evidence is showing that users of these technologies may be constructing unfounded trust that may be leading to false security in engaging in unprotected sex…
6. HCI Enabled Opportunities How is trust and/or trustworthiness constructed? Does location impact decision-making? What constitutes presentation of “self” What are the implications of social networks HIV status disclosure behaviors “Recommendations play a vital role in our decision-making process…You look at the advice of people you know and trust” (WSJ, 31 March 11)
7. Nudging….. “People say, You are tricking people, and that’s manipulative! He says. But the truth is any eating environment is manipulative in that it will lead you to eat a certain way. So let’s create environments that nudge people to do the right thing”
9. Beyond “Intervening” Towards Enabling Safer Experiences “We (Queerty.com) asked Joel Simkhai if he sees the Grindr environment as an opportunity to present messages about safer sex…Well, maybe. He is noncommittal. “I’d have to look at it” he says. “You won’t see us advocating too much. We’ll do a little advocacy, but not too much…We tend not to get too involved.” He adds: “We’ve got adults here, and adults like to be treated like adults. You can’t talk down to them Less about convincing or educating, more a matter of design ???? Experience design, that is.
Notes de l'éditeur
MSM who meet sex partners online report more sex partners,18-21 sex with casual partners,18-21 and more unprotected anal intercourse,22 although their behavior is similarly risky with partners met off-line.14-16,23 Thus, those meeting partners online can expand their sexual networks, thereby increasing the potential for transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs).7,24,25