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Title:      SUBJECTIVE ASPECTS OF PERSONALIZATION: THE IMPACT OF TRUST AND INFORMATION
Author(s):      Kerstin Heuwinkel
ISBN:      972-98947-1-X
Editors:      Pedro Isaías and Nitya Karmakar
Year:      2003
Edition:      2
Keywords:      Information logistics, e-healthcare, trust, personalization, internet .
Type:      Full Paper
First Page:      211
Last Page:      218
Language:      English
Cover:      cover          
Full Contents:      click to dowload Download
Paper Abstract:      Information – understood as knowledge in action – is a fundamental prerequisite for every part of modern societies. This also comes true in the field of healthcare and public health. Medical informedness brings benefits for the whole society as well as for the individual. Epidemiological studies show the positive impact of information on health. The emerging field of health-literacy focuses on this. For the individual, being well informed results in a good and secure feeling. People need to know what is happening with them, what their illness means, what the implications are. The internet has long been seen as a solution for problems related to information, as it gives access to mostly free information regardless of location. But negative effects such as information flood and bad quality of online information has led to a critical discussion. Without intelligent concepts that enable a user-oriented information supply of high-quality-information the internet will not succeed. Much efforts concentrate on technological and objective quality issues. Subjective aspects such as user-views and soft facts, e.g. trust, are often forgotten. In order to provide the right information one has to understand what “right” - from the user’s point of view - means. Therefore, concepts of personalization have to integrate both objective and subjective aspects. Furthermore, the interdependence between “right information”, personalization and trust has to be discussed. The task is to develop a framework of trust that serves as a basis for an extensive strategy for improving trust. It defines a trust level and includes a list of requirements onto “intelligent” information and communication systems.
   

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