Bloom: Scaffolding Multiple Positive Emotion Regulation Techniques to Enhance Casual Conversations and Promote the Subjective Well-Being of Emerging Adults
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Positive Casual Conversations Through Positive Emotion Regulation
2.2. First-Person Method: Autobiographical Research Through Design
2.3. Experiential-Versus-Didactic Emotion Regulation Technologies
3. Developing Bloom: A Prototype to Facilitate Flourishing Conversations
3.1. Applying Autobiographical Research Through Design
3.2. Positive Emotion Regulation Technique Selection Process
3.3. Process Prototype Design and Interaction Scenarios
- Late-night dorm room hangout: After finishing their study sessions, a group of students gathers spontaneously in their dormitory lounge. They sink into the couches and place their phones on Bloom, ready for a relaxed conversation to unwind from the day.
- Being immersed and absorbed: As Bloom’s flowers light up, the students become absorbed in conversation. They discuss lighthearted topics such as favorite music, campus gossip, and travel plans. Bloom’s gentle glow helps them stay in the moment, free from phone distractions.
- Engaging in a collective: Each phone placed on Bloom activates more lights, a subtle reminder of their shared engagement. The collective lighting reflects the inclusive, relaxed atmosphere, making everyone feel connected to the group.
- Creating a savoring atmosphere: The soft, ambient light transforms the casual hangout into a warm, inviting space. In this relaxed mood, time seems to slow, and students feel comfortable sharing deeper thoughts about their future dreams.
- Sharing the positive experience with others: The group exchanges funny stories from the week, laughing and bonding over shared experiences. They often note how much they are enjoying this low-key hangout, with Bloom’s light serving as a visual reminder of their time together.
- Infusing the ordinary with special meaning: Bloom elevates what could have been an ordinary late-night chat into something special. The device transforms a spontaneous gathering into a memorable moment, leaving the group feeling more connected and refreshed.
4. Evaluation: Experiences of Using and Living with Bloom
4.1. Method and Data Analysis
4.2. Results
4.2.1. Initial Experiences
4.2.2. Integrating Bloom into Daily Life
4.2.3. Contextual Factors
4.2.4. Enhancing Social Interactions
4.2.5. Interpersonal Dynamics
4.2.6. Challenges and Adaptations
4.2.7. Evolution over Time
4.2.8. Other Findings—Additional PER Activities
5. Discussion
5.1. Methodological and Theoretical Contributions
5.2. Key Interaction Qualities of Bloom That Contributed to Facilitating Casual Conversations
5.2.1. Social Accountability
5.2.2. Autonomy and Open-Endedness
5.2.3. Fit with Context and Enhanced Visibility
5.3. Limitations and Future Study Directions
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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PER Technique | Description |
---|---|
Being immersed and absorbed | Becoming fully engaged in a positive experience or its aspects, existing only in the present. Example activity: Creating a mural at a school with students, focusing only on the act of painting together. |
Engaging in a collective | Joining in, or contributing to the shared concerns of a group. Rather than feeling apart from a sense of communal purpose. Example activity: Participating in a marathon to raise money for a sick colleague. |
Creating a savoring atmosphere | Creating or rearranging the environment to physically, psychologically, and socially support the intended positive experience. Example activity: Lighting candles and playing romantic music during your anniversary dinner. |
Sharing the positive experience with others | Creating a ripple effect between you and others in response to positive experiences. Example activity: Encouraging your friend to try a terrific new restaurant you discovered. |
Infusing ordinary events with positive meaning | Enriching day-to-day experiences with language, thoughts, and actions that promote positive associations. Rather than seeing experiences only in a functional way. Example activity: Inventing a nickname for your smart lamp so that you can speak of it playfully. |
PER Technique | Description |
---|---|
Being immersed and absorbed | Bloom fostered sustained engagement by removing external distractions and creating an immersive, uninterrupted experience. The soft lighting and slow transitions helped stay present in the conversation in a calming way. |
Engaging in a collective | Bloom transformed individual engagement into a shared experience, reinforcing social presence. When multiple people placed their phones on Bloom, the light intensity increased, creating a collaborative interaction ritual—a collective moment of commitment that reinforced the feeling of being part of a group conversation. |
Creating a savoring atmosphere | Bloom’s lighting and slow, rhythmic feedback encouraged mindful reflection and emotional resonance; the glowing flowers made the space feel more intimate and helped appreciate the conversation more deeply. |
Sharing the positive experience with others | Bloom functioned as a social cue for positive reinforcement, reminding everyone of their shared experience. Seeing the light respond to their presence reinforced the importance of their conversation, making it feel like a special, collective event. |
Infusing ordinary events with positive meaning | Bloom elevated casual interactions by giving them symbolic weight. The physical act of placing a phone on Bloom became a ritualistic gesture, reinforcing social accountability and emotional investment. |
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Kozin, K.; Mapara, S.; Kim, C.; Yoon, J. Bloom: Scaffolding Multiple Positive Emotion Regulation Techniques to Enhance Casual Conversations and Promote the Subjective Well-Being of Emerging Adults. Multimodal Technol. Interact. 2025, 9, 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti9040033
Kozin K, Mapara S, Kim C, Yoon J. Bloom: Scaffolding Multiple Positive Emotion Regulation Techniques to Enhance Casual Conversations and Promote the Subjective Well-Being of Emerging Adults. Multimodal Technologies and Interaction. 2025; 9(4):33. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti9040033
Chicago/Turabian StyleKozin, Kyra, Sehar Mapara, Chajoong Kim, and JungKyoon Yoon. 2025. "Bloom: Scaffolding Multiple Positive Emotion Regulation Techniques to Enhance Casual Conversations and Promote the Subjective Well-Being of Emerging Adults" Multimodal Technologies and Interaction 9, no. 4: 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti9040033
APA StyleKozin, K., Mapara, S., Kim, C., & Yoon, J. (2025). Bloom: Scaffolding Multiple Positive Emotion Regulation Techniques to Enhance Casual Conversations and Promote the Subjective Well-Being of Emerging Adults. Multimodal Technologies and Interaction, 9(4), 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti9040033