Investigating Best Practices for Remote Summative Usability Testing with People with Mild to Moderate Dementia

Author:

Wood Rachel1ORCID,Dixon Emma1,Elsayed-Ali Salma1,Shokeen Ekta1,Lazar Amanda1,Lazar Jonathan1

Affiliation:

1. Information Studies, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA

Abstract

People with dementia may miss out on the benefits of using technology, because they often find it difficult to use. Usability testing is one method to identify barriers and areas for improvement in technology. Unfortunately, usability testing is often not conducted with people with dementia, independent of their caregivers. Difficulty recruiting local participants with dementia who regularly use technology further compounds the problem. Remote methods have been proposed as one approach to recruiting hard-to-reach populations. Currently, it is unclear how to effectively conduct remote summative usability testing with people with dementia. We recruited 15 participants. Five took part in the pilot study and 10 participated in the main study. We identify best practices and make suggestions for remote summative usability tests with people who have mild to moderate dementia, independent of caregivers. We discuss our findings in three sections: (1) logistics for planning remote summative usability testing, (2) approaches for conducting remote summative usability testing, including modifications of research methods, and (3) considerations when evaluating findings from remote summative usability sessions. We also present modified usability testing methods we developed to meet the unique needs of users with mild to moderate dementia, and summarize lessons learned and new directions for research on this topic.

Funder

National Institute on Disability, Independent Living and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR) at the Administration for Community Living, US Department of Health and Human Services

US Department of Education grant

National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Human-Computer Interaction

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