Towards co-design of rehabilitation technologies: a collaborative approach to prioritize usability issues

K. Clanchy, J. Mitchell, K. Mulholland, E. Jurd, E. Kendall, D. G. Lloyd, D. Palipana, C. Pizzolato, C. Shirota
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Abstract

Early stakeholder engagement is critical to the successful development and translation of rehabilitation technologies, a pivotal step of which is usability testing with intended end-users. To this end, several methods employ end-user feedback to identify usability and implementation issues. However, the process of prioritizing identified issues seldom leverages the knowledge and expertise of the range of stakeholders who will ultimately affect the demand and supply of a device. This paper describes a novel method to prioritize end-user feedback using transdisciplinary stakeholder consultation and address it in subsequent product development. The proposed approach was demonstrated using a case study relating to the development of a novel technology for neural recovery after spinal cord injury.Feedback from five individuals with chronic spinal cord injury was collected during two-hour usability evaluation sessions with a fully functional high-fidelity system prototype. A think-aloud and semi-structured interview protocol was used with each participant to identify usability and acceptability issues relating to the system in a 3-phase approach. Phase 1 involved extracting usability issues from think-aloud and semi-structured interview data. Phase 2 involved rating the usability issues based on their significance, technical feasibility, and implementation priority by relevant internal and external stakeholders. Finally, Phase 3 involved aggregating the usability issues according to design and implementation elements to facilitate solution generation, and these solutions were then raised as action tasks for future design iterations.Sixty usability issues representing nine facets of usability were rated. Eighty percent of issues were rated to be of moderate to high significance, 83% were rated as being feasible to address, and 75% were rated as addressable using existing project resources. Fifty percent of the issues were rated to be a high priority for implementation. Evaluation of the grouped issues identified 21 tasks which were mapped to the product roadmap for integration into future design iterations.This paper presents a method for meaningful transdisciplinary stakeholder engagement in rehabilitation technology development that can extended to other projects. Alongside a worked example, we offer practical considerations for others seeking to co-develop rehabilitation technologies.
共同设计康复技术:优先考虑可用性问题的合作方法
早期利益相关者的参与对于康复技术的成功开发和转化至关重要,其中一个关键步骤是对预期最终用户进行可用性测试。为此,有几种方法利用最终用户的反馈来确定可用性和实施问题。然而,在对所发现的问题进行优先排序的过程中,很少能充分利用最终会影响设备供需的利益相关者的知识和专长。本文介绍了一种利用跨学科利益相关者咨询对最终用户反馈进行优先排序并在后续产品开发中加以解决的新方法。在对一个全功能高保真系统原型进行两小时可用性评估的过程中,收集了五名慢性脊髓损伤患者的反馈意见。对每位参与者都采用了 "大声思考 "和半结构化访谈协议,以分三个阶段确定与系统有关的可用性和可接受性问题。第 1 阶段包括从畅所欲言和半结构化访谈数据中提取可用性问题。第 2 阶段是由相关的内部和外部利益相关者根据可用性问题的重要性、技术可行性和实施优先级对其进行评级。最后,第三阶段是根据设计和实施要素对可用性问题进行汇总,以促进解决方案的生成,然后将这些解决方案作为行动任务提出,用于未来的设计迭代。80%的问题被评为中度到高度重要,83%的问题被评为可以解决,75%的问题被评为可以利用现有项目资源解决。50%的问题被评为高度优先实施。对分组问题的评估确定了 21 项任务,这些任务被映射到产品路线图中,以便整合到未来的设计迭代中。本文介绍了一种在康复技术开发过程中实现有意义的跨学科利益相关者参与的方法,这种方法可以推广到其他项目中。我们通过一个实际案例,为其他寻求共同开发康复技术的人提供了实用的注意事项。
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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