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How Patients With Cancer Use the Internet to Search for Health Information: Scenario-Based Think-Aloud Study

How Patients With Cancer Use the Internet to Search for Health Information: Scenario-Based Think-Aloud Study

Of these 75 members, we invited 34 (45%) individuals based on purposive sampling to take part in the scenario-based, think-aloud study. Eventually, of the 34 individuals, 5 (15%) participated in the pilot study, and 15 (44%) participated in the think-aloud sessions, 5 (33%) for each scenario. Among the 34 individuals, there were 9 (26%) nonresponses, 1 (3%) failed recording, and 4 (12%) who opted out.

Fiorella Huijgens, Pascale Kwakman, Marij Hillen, Julia van Weert, Monique Jaspers, Ellen Smets, Annemiek Linn

JMIR Infodemiology 2025;5:e59625

Game-Based Promotion of Assertiveness to Mitigate the Effects of Bullying in High School Students: Development and Evaluation Study

Game-Based Promotion of Assertiveness to Mitigate the Effects of Bullying in High School Students: Development and Evaluation Study

Each scenario was crafted to mirror real-life social dynamics, reflecting challenges that players might encounter outside the game. Characters’ responses were programed to adapt based on the player’s choices (eg, rewarding assertive behavior and gently redirecting passive or aggressive actions). This dynamic feedback system, integrated with the Love Coins scoring mechanism, gave players the opportunity to experiment, reflect, and adjust their behavior in real time.

Francisco Lepe-Salazar, Fernando Mejía-Romero, Dámaso Benicio-Rodríguez, Aylin Hernández-Reyes, Tatsuo Nakajima, Sarita Salgado-Torres

JMIR Serious Games 2024;12:e58452

AI-Enabled Medical Education: Threads of Change, Promising Futures, and Risky Realities Across Four Potential Future Worlds

AI-Enabled Medical Education: Threads of Change, Promising Futures, and Risky Realities Across Four Potential Future Worlds

Using scenario-based strategic planning techniques, we examine the future of medical education within the context of 4 hypothetical worlds increasingly influenced by AI. This approach has been widely used by organizations such as Shell [22-24], General Electric [25], and the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) to assess their preparedness for various alternative futures or scenarios, thus enabling them to manage uncertainty, risk, and opportunity more effectively [26].

Michelle I Knopp, Eric J Warm, Danielle Weber, Matthew Kelleher, Benjamin Kinnear, Daniel J Schumacher, Sally A Santen, Eneida Mendonça, Laurah Turner

JMIR Med Educ 2023;9:e50373

Post-COVID Public Health Surveillance and Privacy Expectations in the United States: Scenario-Based Interview Study

Post-COVID Public Health Surveillance and Privacy Expectations in the United States: Scenario-Based Interview Study

We created the scenario in accordance with best practices for scenario-based research, such that it was open to interpretation, realistic, and did not elicit “right or wrong” responses [79]. The semantic content of the scenario was iteratively developed by both authors based on analyses of existing smart health devices (eg, thermometers, glucose monitors) that may be reasonably paired with contact tracing apps.

John S Seberger, Sameer Patil

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2021;9(10):e30871

Returning to a Normal Life via COVID-19 Vaccines in the United States: A Large-scale Agent-Based Simulation Study

Returning to a Normal Life via COVID-19 Vaccines in the United States: A Large-scale Agent-Based Simulation Study

The first scenario from the former Trump administration, named Operation Warp Speed, stated that vaccines will be available in tiered amounts (20 million in December, 30 million in January, and 50 million every month thereafter). The second scenario from the Biden administration, known as the 100-day goal, proposes that there will be 1 million vaccines every day [44], thus covering 50 million Americans.

Junjiang Joseph Li, Philippe Giabbanelli

JMIR Med Inform 2021;9(4):e27419