Paper Number
3070
Paper Type
Complete
Abstract
Individuals join online healthcare communities (OHCs) to engage with an audience that observes their behaviors with the aim of improving self-control. While this engagement requires a significant investment of time, energy, and attention, it represents a voluntary act we describe as "audience pre-commitment”, where participants willingly accept these costs to gain accountability. In this paper, utilizing data from a large OHC platform, we empirically explore which individuals engage with community features as a form of audience pre-commitment and assess the impact of such an engagement on health behaviors. Our analysis provides evidence that individuals use the community as a means of pre-commitment and such engagement positively and significantly impacts health behaviors. The effectiveness of pre-commitment is further enhanced by a strong network, a private community, and a larger community. We further investigate and discuss insights into the potential mechanisms through which communities help alleviate self-regulation problems.
Recommended Citation
Kim, Gayoon; Min, Donggyu; and Lee, Chul Ho, "Keep an Eye on Me: The Role of Online Communities as a Commitment for Healthier Behaviors" (2024). ICIS 2024 Proceedings. 37.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2024/user_behav/user_behav/37
Keep an Eye on Me: The Role of Online Communities as a Commitment for Healthier Behaviors
Individuals join online healthcare communities (OHCs) to engage with an audience that observes their behaviors with the aim of improving self-control. While this engagement requires a significant investment of time, energy, and attention, it represents a voluntary act we describe as "audience pre-commitment”, where participants willingly accept these costs to gain accountability. In this paper, utilizing data from a large OHC platform, we empirically explore which individuals engage with community features as a form of audience pre-commitment and assess the impact of such an engagement on health behaviors. Our analysis provides evidence that individuals use the community as a means of pre-commitment and such engagement positively and significantly impacts health behaviors. The effectiveness of pre-commitment is further enhanced by a strong network, a private community, and a larger community. We further investigate and discuss insights into the potential mechanisms through which communities help alleviate self-regulation problems.
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21-UserBehavior