Parental control reversed : Using ADR for designing a low-cost monitoring system for elderly

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Ressource 1Download: ICIS.pdf (2262.63 [Ko])
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Serval ID
serval:BIB_9CD6B4774AE0
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Parental control reversed : Using ADR for designing a low-cost monitoring system for elderly
Title of the conference
ICIS 2017 Proceedings
Author(s)
Mettler Tobias, Bächle Michael, Daurer Stephan, Judt Andreas
Publisher
Association for Information Systems
Organization
Thirty Eighth International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS), Seoul, South Korea
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2017
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Pages
1-19
Language
english
Abstract
Demographic change and continuously increasing spending on public health have intensified the public debate as well as deliberations on the development and deployment of new assistive technologies for health, independent living, and well-being for senior citizens. Other than large-scale, policy-driven health initiatives that envision ambitious and risky “grand designs”, in this paper we illustrate the case of a grassroots- like project which used Action Design Research (ADR) as guiding research paradigm to produce a low-cost, yet effective, monitoring system for people with mild cognitive impairments or dementia. Besides a description of meta-requirements and solution components, we also identify general implications for future research. In particular, we explain how an ADR- inspired approach to social innovation could be a useful alternative to large-scale, policy-driven health initiatives to increase the time-to-market of new solutions, pre-test new use cases, and to enhance accessibility and affordability of assistive technologies for the local community.
Keywords
Action design research, remote monitoring system, dementia, ambient assisted living, civic action, chatbot
Create date
16/08/2017 11:58
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:03
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