Sharing automatically tracked activity data: implications for therapists and people with mobility impairments

Meethu Malu, Leah Findlater
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

The ability to share automatically tracked health and fitness behaviors has yielded benefits ranging from increasing user motivation to providing therapists with greater insight into their patients' progress. While past work on sharing this data has primarily focused on users with typical motor abilities, features are now emerging in mainstream tracking technologies to extend to people with mobility impairments (e.g., tracking wheelchair rolling). This paper explores opportunities specifically for users with mobility impairments to share this automatically tracked data both with peers and with physical, occupational or recreational therapists. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 10 therapists and 10 people with mobility impairments. The interviews focused on current and desired activity-tracking and sharing practices, and included a design probe activity to more concretely assess the perceived utility of sharing tracked fitness data. We report on attitudes and concerns toward sharing fitness data from the perspective of therapists and people with mobility impairments as well as outline design opportunities to explore in future work.
共享自动跟踪的活动数据:对治疗师和行动障碍患者的影响
共享自动跟踪的健康和健身行为的能力已经产生了很多好处,从提高用户动力到让治疗师更深入地了解患者的进展。虽然过去共享这些数据的工作主要集中在具有典型运动能力的用户身上,但现在主流跟踪技术的功能正在扩展到行动不便的人身上(例如,跟踪轮椅滚动)。本文专门为行动不便的用户探索了与同行以及物理、职业或娱乐治疗师共享这些自动跟踪数据的机会。我们对10位治疗师和10位行动障碍患者进行了半结构化访谈。访谈集中于当前和期望的活动跟踪和共享实践,并包括一个设计探针活动,以更具体地评估共享跟踪健身数据的感知效用。我们报告了从治疗师和行动障碍患者的角度对共享健身数据的态度和关注,并概述了在未来工作中探索的设计机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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