Patient's reaction to smartwatch based interventions in a controlled environment: preliminary results from the SAMi intervention study

Background: Assistive technologies show promising features to support people with cognitive impairment in daily life, e.g. mobile sensors for falls detection or getting lost. On the other hand, smartwatches bear potential to not only monitor but also interact with the user. While sensor based monito...

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Published in:Alzheimer's & Dementia
Main Authors: Goerss, Doreen, Köhler, Stefanie, Rong, Eleonora, Teipel, Stefan, Bieber, Gerald
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://publica.fraunhofer.de/handle/publica/444723
https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.062249
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spelling ftfrauneprints:oai:publica.fraunhofer.de:publica/444723 2024-04-21T08:11:01+00:00 Patient's reaction to smartwatch based interventions in a controlled environment: preliminary results from the SAMi intervention study Goerss, Doreen Köhler, Stefanie Rong, Eleonora Teipel, Stefan Bieber, Gerald 2022 https://publica.fraunhofer.de/handle/publica/444723 https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.062249 en eng Alzheimer's & dementia 15525260 doi:10.1002/alz.062249 https://publica.fraunhofer.de/handle/publica/444723 Lead Topic: Individual Health Research Line: Human computer interaction (HCI) Adaptive user interfaces Human-computer interaction Mobile computing note 2022 ftfrauneprints https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.062249 2024-03-27T15:14:17Z Background: Assistive technologies show promising features to support people with cognitive impairment in daily life, e.g. mobile sensors for falls detection or getting lost. On the other hand, smartwatches bear potential to not only monitor but also interact with the user. While sensor based monitoring in dementia care is already part of many projects, direct interaction of people with cognitive impairment with smartwatches is little investigated. Method: Based on qualitative studies, we designed interventions for a usual consumer smartwatch. We conceptualized two different tasks: A) drinking water and B) circling bells on a worksheet. Moreover, we implemented two different modes of intervention-intensity affecting vibration patterns, alarm sounds, text sizes, display times or appearance of images and animations. We observed patients’ reactions to interventions A and B remotely via cameras. In case of failure, interventions were repeated up to three times. Here we present data of the interim analysis after completion of n=20 patients that were equally assigned either to mode 1 (regular interventions) or mode 2 (intensive interventions). In addition to observations, participants feedback was obtained with questionnaires. Patients were diagnosed with MCI (n=7) or dementia (n=13) in the local memory clinic. Result: We found it feasible to study patient-smartwatch-interactions with a mixed methods approach. The majority of participants (n=18) were able to successfully complete at least one of two tasks, see Fig. 1. Circling bells (B) was completed only by 11 participants, while drinking water (A) was solved by 16 participants. The regular interventions were successful in 24%, the intensive interventions in 65%. Repetitions did not lead to an improvement of outcome in 13 cases, but in two cases. Reasons for insufficient task completion varied, e.g. patients showed unexpected reactions such as circling the picture on the smartwatch or doing arm circles. One patient fell asleep and did not react at all. Conclusion: ... Text sami Publikationsdatenbank der Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft Alzheimer's & Dementia 18 S2
institution Open Polar
collection Publikationsdatenbank der Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft
op_collection_id ftfrauneprints
language English
topic Lead Topic: Individual Health
Research Line: Human computer interaction (HCI)
Adaptive user interfaces
Human-computer interaction
Mobile computing
spellingShingle Lead Topic: Individual Health
Research Line: Human computer interaction (HCI)
Adaptive user interfaces
Human-computer interaction
Mobile computing
Goerss, Doreen
Köhler, Stefanie
Rong, Eleonora
Teipel, Stefan
Bieber, Gerald
Patient's reaction to smartwatch based interventions in a controlled environment: preliminary results from the SAMi intervention study
topic_facet Lead Topic: Individual Health
Research Line: Human computer interaction (HCI)
Adaptive user interfaces
Human-computer interaction
Mobile computing
description Background: Assistive technologies show promising features to support people with cognitive impairment in daily life, e.g. mobile sensors for falls detection or getting lost. On the other hand, smartwatches bear potential to not only monitor but also interact with the user. While sensor based monitoring in dementia care is already part of many projects, direct interaction of people with cognitive impairment with smartwatches is little investigated. Method: Based on qualitative studies, we designed interventions for a usual consumer smartwatch. We conceptualized two different tasks: A) drinking water and B) circling bells on a worksheet. Moreover, we implemented two different modes of intervention-intensity affecting vibration patterns, alarm sounds, text sizes, display times or appearance of images and animations. We observed patients’ reactions to interventions A and B remotely via cameras. In case of failure, interventions were repeated up to three times. Here we present data of the interim analysis after completion of n=20 patients that were equally assigned either to mode 1 (regular interventions) or mode 2 (intensive interventions). In addition to observations, participants feedback was obtained with questionnaires. Patients were diagnosed with MCI (n=7) or dementia (n=13) in the local memory clinic. Result: We found it feasible to study patient-smartwatch-interactions with a mixed methods approach. The majority of participants (n=18) were able to successfully complete at least one of two tasks, see Fig. 1. Circling bells (B) was completed only by 11 participants, while drinking water (A) was solved by 16 participants. The regular interventions were successful in 24%, the intensive interventions in 65%. Repetitions did not lead to an improvement of outcome in 13 cases, but in two cases. Reasons for insufficient task completion varied, e.g. patients showed unexpected reactions such as circling the picture on the smartwatch or doing arm circles. One patient fell asleep and did not react at all. Conclusion: ...
format Text
author Goerss, Doreen
Köhler, Stefanie
Rong, Eleonora
Teipel, Stefan
Bieber, Gerald
author_facet Goerss, Doreen
Köhler, Stefanie
Rong, Eleonora
Teipel, Stefan
Bieber, Gerald
author_sort Goerss, Doreen
title Patient's reaction to smartwatch based interventions in a controlled environment: preliminary results from the SAMi intervention study
title_short Patient's reaction to smartwatch based interventions in a controlled environment: preliminary results from the SAMi intervention study
title_full Patient's reaction to smartwatch based interventions in a controlled environment: preliminary results from the SAMi intervention study
title_fullStr Patient's reaction to smartwatch based interventions in a controlled environment: preliminary results from the SAMi intervention study
title_full_unstemmed Patient's reaction to smartwatch based interventions in a controlled environment: preliminary results from the SAMi intervention study
title_sort patient's reaction to smartwatch based interventions in a controlled environment: preliminary results from the sami intervention study
publishDate 2022
url https://publica.fraunhofer.de/handle/publica/444723
https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.062249
genre sami
genre_facet sami
op_relation Alzheimer's & dementia
15525260
doi:10.1002/alz.062249
https://publica.fraunhofer.de/handle/publica/444723
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.062249
container_title Alzheimer's & Dementia
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