Abstract

The Advanced Visualization Branch of the National Institute of Nursing Research uses computer technologies to study information visualization in support of self-care management. Advanced technologies, such as immersive virtual reality (IVR), afford researchers the opportunity to study health information visualization where user-initiated information search in visually dense settings precedes acquisition, interpretation, and use. While IVR has broad applicability in healthcare, we chose to target lay people managing chronic disease because of the growing unmet need to translate clinical recommendations into everyday behaviors. To explore how lay people seek, acquire, and interpret health information in everyday settings, we developed an IVR grocery store. In this environment, a person can locate food products, read and compare nutrition labels, and use information to make food selections. The goal of this perspective is to introduce the opportunities afforded by IVR to both present and study health information visualization and to highlight critical design considerations.

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