Faculty Publications

Evaluating User Perceptions and Usability of CommHEAT: A Community-Based Heat Alert Application

Document Type

Conference

Keywords

behavior change, community-based intervention, heat alert, Heat event, heat-protective behaviors, indoor temperature prediction, mobile application, vulnerable populations

Journal/Book/Conference Title

Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society

Volume

69

Issue

1

First Page

988

Last Page

993

Abstract

This research aims to design a community-focused indoor heat emergency alert system for vulnerable populations during extreme heat events. The impacts of extreme heat events are becoming more severe, especially for vulnerable populations. Current warning systems lack information about indoor conditions, and many people do not realize the heat risk, appropriate actions, or available cooling resources. The CommHEAT application is designed based on the Fogg Behavior Model to promote people’s heat-protective behaviors during extreme heat events. It has three key features: customized indoor heat risk prediction, community monitoring and support, and location-based resources. A multi-mode concept testing (exploratory interaction, task-based scenarios, and semi-structured interviews) was conducted with nine heat-vulnerable residents and three stakeholders to evaluate the CommHEAT application prototype. The result shows that this smartphone-based app prototype is promising as an intervention for protecting people from extreme heat. However, the results also identified challenges like trust issues and privacy concerns. Future work will focus on improving the application and assessing its impact on residents’ behavior change during extreme heat events.

Department

Department of Psychology

Original Publication Date

9-1-2025

DOI of published version

10.1177/10711813251359996

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