L
Leanne Hides
Researcher at University of Queensland
Publications - 270
Citations - 9415
Leanne Hides is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 242 publications receiving 6803 citations. Previous affiliations of Leanne Hides include University of Technology, Sydney & University of Wollongong.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Mobile App Rating Scale: A New Tool for Assessing the Quality of Health Mobile Apps
Stoyan Stoyanov,Leanne Hides,David J. Kavanagh,Oksana Zelenko,Dian Tjondronegoro,Madhavan Mani +5 more
TL;DR: The MARS is a simple, objective, and reliable tool for classifying and assessing the quality of mobile health apps and can also be used to provide a checklist for the design and development of new high quality health apps.
Journal ArticleDOI
Gamification for Health and Wellbeing : A Systematic Review of the Literature
Daniel Johnson,Sebastian Deterding,Kerri-Ann Kuhn,Aleksandra Staneva,Stoyan Stoyanov,Leanne Hides +5 more
TL;DR: The current state of evidence supports that gamification can have a positive impact in health and wellbeing, particularly for health behaviours, however several studies report mixed or neutral effect.
Journal ArticleDOI
Development and Validation of the User Version of the Mobile Application Rating Scale (uMARS)
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the development and reliability testing of an end-user version of the Mobile Application Rating Scale (uMARS), which is a simple tool that can be reliably used by end-users to assess the quality of mobile health apps.
Journal ArticleDOI
The prevalence of psychotic symptoms among methamphetamine users
TL;DR: The prevalence of psychosis among the current sample of methamphetamine users was 11 times higher than among the general population in Australia, and Dependent methamphetamine users are a particularly high-risk group for psychosis.
Journal ArticleDOI
Review and Evaluation of Mindfulness-Based iPhone Apps.
TL;DR: Though many apps claim to be mindfulness-related, most were guided meditation apps, timers, or reminders and very few had high ratings on the MARS subscales of visual aesthetics, engagement, functionality or information quality.