Tracking and its Potential for Older Adults with Memory Concerns.

Amelia Short, Norman Makoto Su, Ruipu Hu, Eun Kyoung Choe, Hernisa Kacorri, Margaret Danilovich, David E Conroy, Shannon Jette, Beth Barnett, Amanda Lazar
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Abstract

Much research on older people with memory concerns is focused on tracking and informed by the priorities of others. In this paper, we seek to understand the potential that people with memory concerns see in tracking. We conducted interviews with 29 participants with concerns about their memory and engaged in an affective writing approach. We find a range of potentials that can be traced to how participants are already self-tracking. Emotions associated with these potentials vary: from acceptance to resistance, and positive anticipation to aversion. Participants are emotionally motivated to foreclose possibilities in some instances and keep them open in others. While individual and unique, potential is structured by forces that include individual routines, relationships with others, and macro-level institutions and cultural contexts. We reflect on these findings in the context of research on self-tracking with older adults, designing with ambiguity, and forces that structure the experience of living with memory concerns.

跟踪及其对有记忆问题的老年人的潜力。
许多关于老年人记忆问题的研究都集中在追踪和了解他人的优先事项上。在这篇论文中,我们试图理解有记忆问题的人在跟踪中看到的潜力。我们对29名参与者进行了采访,他们担心自己的记忆力,并采用了情感写作方法。我们发现了一系列的潜力,这些潜力可以追溯到参与者是如何自我跟踪的。与这些潜能相关的情绪各不相同:从接受到抵制,从积极期待到厌恶。参与者在情感上受到激励,在某些情况下排除可能性,在其他情况下保持开放。虽然是个体的和独特的,但潜力是由包括个人惯例、与他人的关系、宏观层面的制度和文化背景在内的力量构成的。我们对这些发现进行了反思,研究对象包括老年人的自我跟踪、模糊设计以及与记忆有关的生活体验的结构。
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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