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Using Active and Passive Smartphone Data to Enhance Adolescents’ Emotional Awareness in Forensic Outpatient Setting: A Qualitative Feasibility and Usability Study

Using Active and Passive Smartphone Data to Enhance Adolescents’ Emotional Awareness in Forensic Outpatient Setting: A Qualitative Feasibility and Usability Study

Specifically, integrating emoji and passive behavioral data may be particularly valuable for adolescents struggling to understand their emotions that precede dysregulated and delinquent behaviors [19,39]. Research indicates that using both active and passive data improves adolescents’ self-insight into their emotions and behavior patterns, which in turn enhances emotional awareness [42,46].

Merel M L Leijse, Levi van Dam, Tijs Jambroes, Amber Timmerman, Arne Popma

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e53613

Development of the Emoji Faces Pain Scale and Its Validation on Mobile Devices in Adult Surgery Patients: Longitudinal Observational Study

Development of the Emoji Faces Pain Scale and Its Validation on Mobile Devices in Adult Surgery Patients: Longitudinal Observational Study

Digital device users are not unfamiliar with emoji faces such as , , and [6,16]. Until September 2021, a total of 3633 emoji had been created. Among all those emoji, at least 126 face-related emoji can be regarded as potential candidate faces to construct a pain scale. Face pain scales made of emoji faces might be more generalizable to more populations because emoji are not specific to a certain group of people.

Lili Li, Sicheng Wu, Jian Wang, Chunchun Wang, Weixin Zuo, Liping Yu, Jiangang Song

J Med Internet Res 2023;25:e41189

Emoji Education: How Students Can Help Increase Health Awareness by Making Emojis

Emoji Education: How Students Can Help Increase Health Awareness by Making Emojis

As members of a new generation that sends over 10 billion emojis a day, we have the greatest experience in knowing how to balance the artistic features of an emoji with the necessary detail to convey the information correctly. Researchers have proposed the development of new health-related emojis such as a liver emoji [7] and kidney emoji [8]. However, tech-savvy medical students have the ability to increase the use and accessibility of emojis by just increasing the use of emojis in common health media.

Sammer Marzouk, Shuhan He, Jarone Lee

JMIR Med Educ 2022;8(4):e39059

Digital Visual Communication for Public Health: Design Proposal for a Vaccinated Emoji

Digital Visual Communication for Public Health: Design Proposal for a Vaccinated Emoji

For instance, a recent survey of 68 million tweets found that one in five contained an emoji [2]. These emojis are often used to discuss current events, and indeed in the early phases of the COVID-19 pandemic, there was a clear increase on the microbe emoji and face with medical mask emoji [3]. As the Bio NTech/Pfizer and Moderna m RNA vaccines began to roll out, there was then a subsequent increase in the use of the syringe emoji [4].

Tamara Sonia Boender, Noah Louis-Ferdinand, Gideon Duschek

J Med Internet Res 2022;24(4):e35786