Expressive writing is an established approach for stress management, and recent practices include information technology. Although mobile interfaces have the potential to support daily stress management practices, interface designs for such mobile expressive writing and their effects on stress relief still lack empirical understanding. To fill the gap, we examined the interface design of mobile expressive writing by investigating the influence of input modalities and visual feedback designs on usability and perceived cathartic effects through in-the-wild studies. While our studies confirmed the stress relief effects of mobile expressive writing, our results offer important insights in interface design. We found keyboard-based text entry more user-friendly and preferred over voice messages due to its privacy friendliness and reflection process. Participants expressed different reasons for preferring different post-writing visual feedback depending on the cause and type of stress. This paper also discusses future research opportunities in interface designs for mobile expressive writing.
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