My research deals with providing communication solutions to elderly people that have minimal to no technical experience and capability. We have developed the Keep in Touch (KiT) app to assist these people communicate with family and friends.
These slides were presented to the CHAI research group in the University of Sydney school of IT.
4. Motivation & Context
Ageing population double worldwide by 2050*
Aus. 85+ increase from 1.6% to 4.9%-7.2% **
Elderly people often prefer to “age in place”
Globalisation and urbanisation lead to
distributed families
Communication is key for elderly wellbeing
* http://transgenerational.org/aging/demographics.htm#ixzz1VdKIfz5e
** By 2056, see http://www.abs.gov.au/Ausstats/abs@.nsf/mf/3222.0
10. Research Overview
To Methodologically Explore…
What do people
actually want from
such a solution
Whether KiT in its
current version is
useful
Suitable user
interface for the
elderly
11. User Interface For the Elderly
Self Explanatory
GUI
Touch-screen
gestures
Colours, fonts &
symbols
Size & number
of objects
Location in
home
12. Is KiT Useful?
How do
people use it?
What sort of
messages?
What are the
implications?
Will it help
aging in place?
Is it useful for
the elderly?
13. What Do People Want (For Next Version)?
Phatic
technology?
Sensor-
based?
Mobile?
Gamification?
Location
based?
14. Research Goals
How to
increase
Communication
interactions
Research Best practices
for touch CHI
Goals for the elderly
Identifying
methods to
bring care
circles closer
41. Design Guidelines*
* Boustani, S. (2010, October 27). Designing touch-based interfaces for the elderly. Sydney, NSW,
Australia: University of Sydney, faculty of engineering, school of electrical engineering.
42. Design Guidelines*
Avoid scroll bars
Use simple large fonts with left justification
Avoid moving text
Important information should be concentrated in the centre
Keep consistent interface
Avoid red / green and blue / yellow colour combinations
Minimal to no animation
Provide larger targets
Avoid multi-touch interactions
Avoid note taking / scribble functions * Boustani, S. (2010, October 27). Designing touch-based interfaces for the elderly. Sydney, NSW,
Australia: University of Sydney, faculty of engineering, school of electrical engineering.
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45. Thank You
Amnon Carmel
acar4721@uni.sydney.edu.au
Notas do Editor
Research Statement: Exploring an asynchronous audio appliance for helping elderly people and their care circle keep in touch.Hypothesis: Does it enable people to communicate more often. How do people use it? How does it change things? How often do they use it?What sort of messages are sent? (We won’t be listening to messages)What are the communication implicationsWill it help aging in place?How many contacts are there? How many messages per day are ideal etc. Is it useful for the elderly.