SmartEater | Enhancing recovery from eating and weight disorders using mHealth and psychological theory

Summary
Smartphones are ubiquitous in all age groups and socioeconomic levels and digitalization of various life domains is in full
progress. While there are several areas where skepticism is justified, the personal health domain still holds high promises, particularly when applied in specific settings. The proposed mHealth app SmartEater provides intelligent mobile logging of stress, and eating
behavior as a basis for intervention and follow-up care in clinics treating eating disorders and obesity. Current apps require frequent and cumbersome entries, resulting in low user adherence and poor data quality. Evidence for their usefulness is often missing. Further, therapeutic content is not personalized. In SmartEater, users repeatedly enter data on experienced craving for foods and stress. SmartEater then ‘learns’ from the user through sophisticated machine learning algorithms: data from smartphone usage
patterns (e.g. screen-on time, calls, messages, internet traffic) and sensor data (e.g. movement, background noise) are
combined to substitute for manual user input, thereby progressively reducing user burden. Temporal pattern analysis of
individual time-series allows prediction of stress and craving bouts into the near future. Such predictions allows the app to respond
to upcoming eating 'crises’ e.g. overeating/binge eating and launch situation-appropriate tips that have been developed individually for the user during in-patient treatment. SmartEater will be routed in psychological models of eating behavior and rigorously tested in the described population to evaluate efficacy. Due to the sensitive nature of such data, SmartEater enforces strict privacy protection. Targeted markets include health insurances which profit from improved patient health and successful transfer into daily life after professional treatment as well as clinics with an eating/weight disorder focus in German speaking coutries.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/825403
Start date: 01-01-2019
End date: 30-06-2020
Total budget - Public funding: 150 000,00 Euro - 150 000,00 Euro
Cordis data

Original description

Smartphones are ubiquitous in all age groups and socioeconomic levels and digitalization of various life domains is in full
progress. While there are several areas where skepticism is justified, the personal health domain still holds high promises, particularly when applied in specific settings. The proposed mHealth app SmartEater provides intelligent mobile logging of stress, and eating
behavior as a basis for intervention and follow-up care in clinics treating eating disorders and obesity. Current apps require frequent and cumbersome entries, resulting in low user adherence and poor data quality. Evidence for their usefulness is often missing. Further, therapeutic content is not personalized. In SmartEater, users repeatedly enter data on experienced craving for foods and stress. SmartEater then ‘learns’ from the user through sophisticated machine learning algorithms: data from smartphone usage
patterns (e.g. screen-on time, calls, messages, internet traffic) and sensor data (e.g. movement, background noise) are
combined to substitute for manual user input, thereby progressively reducing user burden. Temporal pattern analysis of
individual time-series allows prediction of stress and craving bouts into the near future. Such predictions allows the app to respond
to upcoming eating 'crises’ e.g. overeating/binge eating and launch situation-appropriate tips that have been developed individually for the user during in-patient treatment. SmartEater will be routed in psychological models of eating behavior and rigorously tested in the described population to evaluate efficacy. Due to the sensitive nature of such data, SmartEater enforces strict privacy protection. Targeted markets include health insurances which profit from improved patient health and successful transfer into daily life after professional treatment as well as clinics with an eating/weight disorder focus in German speaking coutries.

Status

CLOSED

Call topic

ERC-2018-PoC

Update Date

27-04-2024
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Horizon 2020
H2020-EU.1. EXCELLENT SCIENCE
H2020-EU.1.1. EXCELLENT SCIENCE - European Research Council (ERC)
ERC-2018
ERC-2018-PoC