Title
The Struggle for Recognition in Advanced Dementia: Implications for Experience-Centered Design.
Abstract
Focusing on the person with advanced dementia as a social being presents a new opportunity for Experience-Centered Design (ECD), opening design to appreciate the agency and intentional actions of the person with advanced dementia. If Human-Computer Interaction is to shift from the predominantly assistive approach to a focus on experience, a theoretical framing that emphasizes the relational nature of selfhood is needed. In this article, we present Recognition Theory—a social theory based on an inter-subjectivist account of the struggle for recognition—to extend ECD approaches for advanced dementia. Focusing on people with advanced dementia, we examine recognition as a social and ethical perspective for establishing and maintaining self. We present a framework for design based on research with people with advanced dementia, experience-centered engagement and social identity, that will support designers to craft opportunities for mutual recognition in the design process and the practice of making.
Year
DOI
Venue
2019
10.1145/3359594
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
Keywords
Field
DocType
Dementia,experience-centered design,person-centered care,recognition theory
Computer science,Human–computer interaction,Dementia
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
26
6
1073-0516
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
0
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Sarah Foley100.68
J McCarthy274572.26
Nadia Pantidi313414.42