AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to create a smartphone intervention to foster a future-oriented mindset among students, addressing the negative behaviors linked to short-term thinking.
  • The research will involve first-year university students, where some will use the intervention while others will engage in a goal-setting control group, tracking various outcomes over time.
  • Results will help understand user experiences, assess the effectiveness of the intervention, and identify which specific modules lead to the most significant changes, guiding future app improvements.

Article Abstract

Background: Short-term mindsets interfere with the consideration of future consequences and therefore predict negative behaviors. We developed a smartphone-based intervention aiming to increase a future-oriented mindset and personal goal attainment by strengthening future self-identification and stimulating episodic future thinking. The aims of the study are 1) to examine users' experiences with the application and their treatment adherence, 2) to examine the effectiveness of the intervention, and 3) to explore which intervention modules generate the strongest changes in key outcomes.

Methods: First-year university students ( = 166) will be randomly assigned to two conditions: 1) the smartphone-based intervention, or 2) a goal-setting control group. The intervention consists of three week-long modules. Data will be collected at the start of the intervention, at weekly intervals during the intervention, immediately after the intervention, and at 3-month follow-up (and at parallel time points for the control group). We will assess users' experiences, application usage data, primary intervention outcomes (e.g., self-defeating behavior, future orientation, future self-identification), and secondary intervention outcomes (e.g., psychosocial wellbeing, self-efficacy).

Discussion: The study will provide information about users' experiences with the application, the intervention's general effectiveness, and which intervention modules show most promise. This information will be used to further develop the application and optimize this novel intervention.

Trial Registration: The trial is registered in the Netherlands Trial Register (number: NL9671) on 16 August 2021.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8857597PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2022.100509DOI Listing

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