Constructing Everyday Well-Being: Insights from God-Saeng (God生) for Personal Informatics

要旨

While Personal Informatics (PI) systems support behavior change, everyday well-being involves more than achieving individual target behaviors. It is shaped by cultural narratives that give actions meaning. In South Korea, the God-Saeng (God生) phenomenon—encompassing disciplined, collective, and publicly documented self-improvement practices—offers a lens into how well-being is negotiated in daily life. We conducted a 10-day probe (N=24) with bite-sized missions to examine how young adults engaged in God-Saeng. Participants relied on planning practices, accountability infrastructures, and datafication to stabilize themselves, yet these same routines also intensified pressures toward self-monitoring and performance. They navigated tensions between consistency and flexibility, authenticity and visibility, and productivity and broader values such as relationships, and reinterpreted ordinary activities through sociocultural contexts. These insights suggest design opportunities for PI systems that move beyond tracking, toward digital instruments that help users negotiate tensions, make meaning, and reflexively understand how technologies participate in their culturally and existentially situated well-being.

著者
Inhwa Song
Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, United States
Kwangyoung Lee
KAIST, Daejeon, Korea, Republic of
Janghee Cho
National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore
Amon Rapp
University of Turin, Torino, Italy
Hwajung Hong
KAIST, Deajeon, Korea, Republic of

会議: CHI 2026

ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

セッション: AI Explanations and Decision Support in Healthcare

Auditorium
7 件の発表
2026-04-13 20:15:00
2026-04-13 21:45:00