How do I compare to the other people?": Older Adults' Perspectives on Personal Smart Home Data for Self-Management"

Author:

Caldeira Clara1ORCID,Nurain Novia1ORCID,Heintzman Anna A.1ORCID,Molchan Haley1ORCID,Caine Kelly2ORCID,Demiris George3ORCID,Siek Katie A.1ORCID,Reeder Blaine4ORCID,Connelly Kay1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA

2. Clemson University, Clemson, SC, USA

3. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA

4. University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA

Abstract

Research on smart home monitoring for older adults has predominantly focused on systems whose data and alerts are directed towards family members, caregivers, or healthcare providers. Older adults have expressed interest in engaging with these systems by seeing and using their data, but they are often limited to a passive role as subjects of monitoring. This paper presents qualitative results of a longitudinal smart home project with older adults living independently in the community. Based on interviews conducted throughout the 2.5-year study with 12 participants, we report on their lived experiences of having the monitoring system in their homes and on how they reflected on the data collected by the system. The results show how participants were able to extract meaningful information from the monitoring data without finding the system invasive or intrusive. Specifically, older adults exhibited interest in data that they found indicative of living an active lifestyle, such as time spent outside the home. Drawing from critical literature on active aging, we discuss implications for incorporating peer comparisons to support reflection on personal health data without reinforcing a deficit narrative of aging.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Computing Research Association

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computer Networks and Communications,Human-Computer Interaction,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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3. Ryan Ahmed , Tammy Toscos , Romisa Rohani Ghahari , Richard J Holden, Elizabeth Martin, Shauna Wagner, Carly Daley, Amanda Coupe, and Michael Mirro. 2019 . Visualization of cardiac implantable electronic device data for older adults using participatory design. Applied clinical informatics, 10, 04, 707--718. Ryan Ahmed, Tammy Toscos, Romisa Rohani Ghahari, Richard J Holden, Elizabeth Martin, Shauna Wagner, Carly Daley, Amanda Coupe, and Michael Mirro. 2019. Visualization of cardiac implantable electronic device data for older adults using participatory design. Applied clinical informatics, 10, 04, 707--718.

4. Deemah Alqahtani Caroline Jay and Markel Vigo. 2022. Spatio-temporal and contextual cues to support reflection in physical activity tracking. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 102865. Deemah Alqahtani Caroline Jay and Markel Vigo. 2022. Spatio-temporal and contextual cues to support reflection in physical activity tracking. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 102865.

5. The Adventures of Older Authors

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