Designing a Music-controlled Running Application: a Sports Science and Psychological Perspective
C. Bauer, and A. Kratschmar. ACM SIGCHI Extended Abstracts of Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2015), page 1379-1384. ACM, (2015)
DOI: 10.1145/2702613.2732736
Abstract
Music has long been acknowledged for its effects on participants in sports and exercise. For casual runners music may act as a motivator and distractor of physical strain. It may also serve as a training guide, when sensing technology is used as an enabler for adapting music to a runner’s situation in real-time. While many effects of music are known from sports science and psychology, application designers lack a consolidated knowledge base that guides them in designing a running application. This work synthesizes findings from the involved disciplines and provides 7 requirements for an application that increases casual runners’ motivation and controls training.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 chi2015
%A Bauer, Christine
%A Kratschmar, Anna
%B ACM SIGCHI Extended Abstracts of Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2015)
%D 2015
%E Begole, Bo
%E Kim, Jinwoo
%E Inkpen, Kori
%E Woo, Woontack
%I ACM
%K imported jogging music myown running
%P 1379-1384
%R 10.1145/2702613.2732736
%T Designing a Music-controlled Running Application: a Sports Science and Psychological Perspective
%X Music has long been acknowledged for its effects on participants in sports and exercise. For casual runners music may act as a motivator and distractor of physical strain. It may also serve as a training guide, when sensing technology is used as an enabler for adapting music to a runner’s situation in real-time. While many effects of music are known from sports science and psychology, application designers lack a consolidated knowledge base that guides them in designing a running application. This work synthesizes findings from the involved disciplines and provides 7 requirements for an application that increases casual runners’ motivation and controls training.
%@ 978-1-4503-3146-3
@inproceedings{chi2015,
abstract = {Music has long been acknowledged for its effects on participants in sports and exercise. For casual runners music may act as a motivator and distractor of physical strain. It may also serve as a training guide, when sensing technology is used as an enabler for adapting music to a runner’s situation in real-time. While many effects of music are known from sports science and psychology, application designers lack a consolidated knowledge base that guides them in designing a running application. This work synthesizes findings from the involved disciplines and provides 7 requirements for an application that increases casual runners’ motivation and controls training.},
added-at = {2019-04-27T18:22:14.000+0200},
author = {Bauer, Christine and Kratschmar, Anna},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2046b09124815e492be761827b4e5c1ba/bauerc},
booktitle = {ACM SIGCHI Extended Abstracts of Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2015)},
doi = {10.1145/2702613.2732736},
editor = {Begole, Bo and Kim, Jinwoo and Inkpen, Kori and Woo, Woontack},
eventdate = {18-23 April 2015},
eventtitle = {Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems},
interhash = {5bad54922cc99d7673e99d4ae0f00b12},
intrahash = {046b09124815e492be761827b4e5c1ba},
isbn = {978-1-4503-3146-3},
keywords = {imported jogging music myown running},
language = {English},
pages = {1379-1384},
publisher = {ACM},
series = {CHI 2015},
timestamp = {2020-06-13T23:46:19.000+0200},
title = {Designing a Music-controlled Running Application: a Sports Science and Psychological Perspective},
type = {Conference Proceedings},
venue = {Seoul, South Korea},
year = 2015
}