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When developing a behavior change intervention, it is first necessary to obtain a comprehensive in-depth understanding of the problem. For example, the Intervention Mapping protocol dedicated the first step, the Needs Assessment, to this endeavour. In this phase, maintaining an overview can be challenging, as all the myraid aspects of reality that are, or may be, relevant are collected and related to each other.
COMPLECS1 was developed to help to keep an overview during this process. It allows adding new information in a piece-wise manner, and then combines everything into one visualisation.
COMPLECS reads the specifications from a spreadsheet. This spreadsheet can be provided either as an URL to Google Sheets (useful if you want to collaborate with multiple people) or as the path to an Excel file.
The spreadsheet workbook should contain four worksheets. The default names2 of these worksheets and columns in those worksheets are as follows.
In the entities
worksheet, you specify
the entities you identified. These become the nodes in the
visualisations. Entities can be people such as a member of the at-risk
population, the target population, or another relevant actor; they can
be more abstract entities such as school boards, hospital management, or
politicians; they can be environmental conditions, such as the presence
of free condoms or drug testing services; or they can be behaviors, such
as bullying or providing social support. In fact, entities can be
anything that you think is useful to include in the overview; there are
really no limitations except what works for you. This flexibility is
possible because entities have types, which are specified in another
worksheet. When specifying an entity, you have to specify a unique
identifier (in column entity_id
), a human-readable label
(in entity_label
), and an entity type
(entity_type_id
).
In the connections
worksheet, you
specify how the entities relate to each other. By default, you can use
the relationship types specified in West et al. (2019, doi:10.1038/s41562-019-0561-2),
such as causal_influences_unspecified
for causal effects
where it is unknown whether the effects are positive or negative;
causal_influences_positive
for positive causal effects;
causal_influences_negative
for negative causal effects; and
causal_influences_unknown
if it is unknown whether there is
a causal effect. When specifying a connection, you have to specify the
entity from which the connection originates
(from_entity_id
), the entity to which that entity connects
(to_entity_id
), and the connection type
(connection_type_id
).
In the entity_types
worksheet, you
specify the possible entity types. By default, the following types are
prespecified: person
, environmental_condition
,
behavior
, and determinant
. You can add more
types here by specifying their type identifier (in column
entity_type_id
) and their human-readable label (in
entity_type_label
), as well as how you want it to look in
the COMPLECS overview by specifying the stroke color
(color
), the shape (shape
), the fill color
(fillcolor
), the style (style
), and the text
color (fontcolor
).
In the connection_types
worksheet, you
specify the possible connection types. By default, all connection types
listed in West et al. (2019, doi:10.1038/s41562-019-0561-2)
have been prespecified. You can add more connection types here by
specifying their connection type identifier (in column
connection_type_id
) and their human-readable label (in
connection_type_label
), as well as how you want the
connection to look in teh COMPLECS overview by specifying the stroke
color (color
), the style (style
), and the
direction of the arrow (dir
).
If you want to use a Google Sheet, make sure you make it public in
two ways (it has to be public in both ways for the R
googlesheets
package to be able to read the information).
To do this, click the Share button at the top-right and clicking “Get
link”, making sure the settings allow anybody with the link to view the
spreadsheet.
Once you specified everyting, you can generate the overview. To do
this, you can use the complecs
function in the
behaviorchange
package (this
function’s manual page is located here). The function only requires
one argument: the URL to a Google Sheet, or the path to an Excel file.
If you use the function like this, the produced COMPLECS overview will
simply be shown. However, you will usually want to save the overview to
a file. To do that, you can use outputFile
to specify a
path and filename of a file you want to write to.
As an example, let us use the COMPLECS specification example located at https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1WMO15xroy4a0RfpuZ8GhT-NfDoxwS34w9PrWp8rGjjk. Let’s first store that long URL in a convenient variable:
<-
googleSheetsURL "https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1WMO15xroy4a0RfpuZ8GhT-NfDoxwS34w9PrWp8rGjjk";
You can produce a COMPLECS overview by simply passing that URL to the
complecs()
function:
::complecs(googleSheetsURL); behaviorchange
If you want to save the resulting COMPLECS overview to a file, you also specify a path and filename:
::complecs(googleSheetsURL,
behaviorchangeoutputFile = "~/complecs-overview-example.pdf");
(The tilde here stands for your so-called ‘home directory’, for example your document folder.)
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
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