Title
Coaching through smart objects.
Abstract
We explore the ways in which smart objects can be used to cue actions as part of coaching for Activities of Daily Living (ADL) following brain damage or injury, such as might arise following a stroke. In this case, appropriate actions are cued for a given context. The context is defined by the intention of the users, the state of the objects and the tasks for which these objects can be used. This requires objects to be instrumented so that they can recognize the actions that users perform. In order to provide appropriate cues, the objects also need to be able to display information to users, e.g., by changing their physical appearance or by providing auditory output. We discuss the ways in which information can be displayed to cue user action.
Year
Venue
Field
2017
PervasiveHealth
Activities of daily living,Activity recognition,Computer science,Cued speech,Human physical appearance,Coaching,Human–computer interaction,Smart objects,Tangible user interface,Distributed computing
DocType
Citations 
PageRank 
Conference
0
0.34
References 
Authors
11
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Chris Baber148374.87
Ahmad Khattab221.07
Joachim Hermsdörfer3154.26
Alan Wing4235.20
Martin Russell533264.88