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Sticking to healthy behaviors is difficult. The lack of long-term behavior maintenance negatively impacts health outcomes and increases healthcare costs. Current methods for improving behavior maintenance yield varying and often limited results. This dissertation designs and tests quantitative methods for

Sticking to healthy behaviors is difficult. The lack of long-term behavior maintenance negatively impacts health outcomes and increases healthcare costs. Current methods for improving behavior maintenance yield varying and often limited results. This dissertation designs and tests quantitative methods for identifying behavioral strategies associated with long-term maintenance the long-term maintenance of three different health behaviors. Data were collected from three settings: mindfulness through a commercial app, walking from a randomized controlled trial, and pill-taking from a commercial app-based intervention. Novel pattern-detection methodologies were employed to measure temporal consistency and identify key behavioral strategies. For mindfulness and walking behaviors, the impact of individual phenotypes on long-term behavior maintenance was analyzed. For medication adherence, the optimal window of time in which pills should be taken was empirically determined, and the impact of consistent timing on long-term medication adherence was analyzed. To perform these analyses, robust and regularized models, panel data models, statistical tests, and clustering algorithms were used. For mindfulness meditation, both consistent and inconsistent phenotypes were associated with long-term engagement. In the walking intervention, those with a consistent phenotype experienced greater increases in walking after the study than inconsistent individuals. However, the effect of consistency was strongest for individuals who either exercised less than 10 or more than 30 minutes per day. Lastly, in the medication adherence incentive program, consistently taking medication within 55 minutes of the goal time had the strongest association with future adherence. This dissertation demonstrates that certain phenotypes are more advantageous than others for long-term maintenance and interventions. Temporal consistency is likely helpful for maintaining behaviors that offer delayed physical benefits, such as regular walking or medicating for chronic illnesses, but less helpful for cognitive behaviors like mindfulness, which can provide more immediate satisfaction. When designing interventions, the nature of the behavior and observable phenotypes should be taken into consideration. Generally, focusing on consistency is likely to contribute to long-term success; however, this is individual and context dependent. Future research should investigate this further by examining the relationship between behavioral phenotypes and psychological measurement tools to gain a deeper understanding of the successful maintenance of healthy behaviors.
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    Title
    • Detecting Behavioral Patterns for Understanding Long-Term Health Behavior Maintenance
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    Date Created
    2023
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    • Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2023
    • Field of study: Biomedical Informatics

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