Original Papers

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Works citing "To Track or Not to Track: User Reactions to Concepts in Longitudinal Health Monitoring"
Jennifer S Beaudin, Stephen S Intille, Margaret E MorrisAccording to Crossref, the following articles are citing this article (DOI 10.2196/jmir.8.4.e29):
(note that this is only a small subset of citations)
| 1. | Kutz D, Shankar K, Connelly K. Making Sense of Mobile- and Web-Based Wellness Information Technology: Cross-Generational Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2013;15(5):e83 [CrossRef] |
| 2. | Thielke S, Harniss M, Thompson H, Patel S, Demiris G, Johnson K. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Human Needs and the Adoption of Health-Related Technologies for Older Adults. Ageing International 2012;37(4):470 [CrossRef] |
| 3. | Segerståhl K, Oinas-Kukkonen H. Designing personal exercise monitoring employing multiple modes of delivery: Implications from a qualitative study on heart rate monitoring. International Journal of Medical Informatics 2011;80(12):e203 [CrossRef] |
| 4. | Marschollek M, Wolf K, Plischke M, Ludwig W, Haux R, Mihailidis A, Howe J. People's Perceptions and Expectations of Assistive Health-Enabling Technologies: An Empirical Study in Germany. Assistive Technology 2009;21(2):86 [CrossRef] |
| 5. | Panton RL, Downie R, Truong T, MacKeen L, Kabene S, Yi Q, Chan HSL, Gallie BL. A visual approach to providing prognostic information to parents of children with retinoblastoma. Psycho-Oncology 2009;18(3):300 [CrossRef] |
| 6. | Frost JH, Massagli MP. Social Uses of Personal Health Information Within PatientsLikeMe, an Online Patient Community: What Can Happen When Patients Have Access to One Another’s Data. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2008;10(3):e15 [CrossRef] |
