G4 Doctoral dissertation (monograph)
Kannustin, koriste ja liikkujan kaveri : tutkimus liikuntateknologian käyttäjyydestä (2017)


Moilanen, P. (2017). Kannustin, koriste ja liikkujan kaveri : tutkimus liikuntateknologian käyttäjyydestä [Doctoral dissertation]. Jyväskylän yliopisto. Jyväskylä studies in computing, 267. http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-39-7233-2


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editorsMoilanen, Panu

ISBN978-951-39-7232-5

eISBN978-951-39-7233-2

Journal or seriesJyväskylä studies in computing

ISSN1456-5390

Publication year2017

Number in series267

Number of pages in the book220

PublisherJyväskylän yliopisto

Place of PublicationJyväskylä

Publication countryFinland

Publication languageFinnish

Persistent website addresshttp://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-39-7233-2

Publication open accessOpenly available

Publication channel open accessOpen Access channel

Publication is parallel published (JYX)http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-39-7233-2

Additional informationA spur, an ornament, and a friend of a mover : a study on the agency of use of sports technology. Julkaistu myös verkkoaineistona. fenomenografia


Abstract

During the last couple of decades, information technology has become a ubiquitous part of almost all areas of everyday life; exercise and sports being no exception. Sports technology can be defined as digital entities, with which one can measure, record and analyse data on sports and physical activity, and refine it according to the needs of its users. This kind of technology has already been researched quite extensively. The majority of this research has concentrated on the effects of sports technology on the level of physical activity of its users, and on the adherence of users to different kinds of physical activity recommendations. In addition to this, within this research, sports technology has been seen as a measurement tool: the interest has been either on the accuracy of the data produced by the technology or on the level of physical activity as measured by sports technology. However, the relationships between sports technology and its users has hardly been researched. To address this identified gap, this thesis (based on phenomenographic approach) concentrates on this relationship: why is sports technology used, for which purposes it is used, what kind of meanings are assigned to it and what kind of feelings are connected to its use? As a result of this thesis, a theory on the agency of use of sports technology, and a model of the context of use of sports technology and its dimensions are presented. This theory describes its core category – the agency of use of sports technology – through four different categories. These categories are exercise and sports, sociality, technology, information and service, which are further described by 17 subcategories. The agency of use is influenced by a Giddensian structure of being a decent exercising citizen, which is present in the Finnish society. The presented theory is situated on the continuum from utilitarian to hedonic motives of use. Together these components form the value, which is the basic motive of a user to use sports technology and through which the continuous use is maintained so that the agency of use can take form. The context of use of sports technology consists of four dimensions: the real-world context of use, the individual self, sociality, and community and society. This model of the context of use is broader than the concept of context commonly used within the research of information systems science. The results presented also widen the traditional way of explaining the adoption and use of technology within information systems science into the direction of understanding the relationship between technology and its users. As practical implications, the developers of sports technology can utilise the results of this thesis to better understand the meanings and expectations connected to use of sports technology. This new understanding could be incorporated into the development processes of their products and services.


Keywordssports technologyphysical trainingexercise (people)usersuser psychologyhuman agencyubiquitous computingsports

Free keywordsexercise; agency; meanings; user behaviour; information systems usage; technology use; ubiquitous technology


Contributing organizations


Ministry reportingYes

Reporting Year2017

Preliminary JUFO ratingNot rated


Last updated on 2023-07-02 at 01:20