Title
Older users, multimodal reminders and assisted living technology.
Abstract
The primary users of assisted living technology are older people who are likely to have one or more sensory impairments. Multimodal technology allows users to interact via non-impaired senses and provides alternative ways to interact if primary interaction methods fail. An empirical user study was carried out with older participants which evaluated the performance, disruptiveness and subjective workload of visual, audio, tactile and olfactory notifications then compared the results with earlier findings in younger participants. It was found that disruption and subjective workload were not affected by modality, although some modalities were more effective at delivering information accurately. It is concluded that although further studies need to be carried out in a real-world settings, the findings support the argument for multiple modalities in assisted living technology.
Year
DOI
Venue
2012
10.1177/1460458212440979
HEALTH INFORMATICS JOURNAL
Keywords
Field
DocType
Accessibility,home care systems,multimodal technology,reminder systems,usability
Modalities,Multiple modalities,Workload,Usability,Human–computer interaction,Sensory system,Living technology,Medicine
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
18.0
SP3.0
1460-4582
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.39
6
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
David Warnock1533.90
Marilyn Rose McGee-Lennon2646.98
Stephen Brewster34913474.60