1 / 19

Research Session 3: Case studies in Living Lab application domains

Research Session 3: Case studies in Living Lab application domains. A Living Lab approach to the development of a consumer care service platform for older people Nikki Holliday, Senior Research Assistant, Health Design & Technology Institute ( HDTI), Coventry University

chick
Télécharger la présentation

Research Session 3: Case studies in Living Lab application domains

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Research Session 3: Case studies in Living Lab application domains A Living Lab approach to the development of a consumer care service platform for older people Nikki Holliday, Senior Research Assistant, Health Design & Technology Institute (HDTI), Coventry University Dr. Gillan Ward (Principal Lecturer, HDTI), Darren Awang (Course Director, HDTI), David Harson (Project Manager, Advanced Digital Institute) The 4thENoLL Living Lab Summer School 27th-30 August 2013 Manchester School of Arts

  2. Outline • Brief overview of the service designed • Describe and discuss the methods used (Co-Creation and Living Labs) • Consider the benefits of using Living Lab methodology

  3. AroundMe™ • The AroundMe™ service (part of the WarmNeighbourhoods brand) is a consumer service that aims to help older or vulnerable people live independently and help their friends and relatives more easily support them • Connected home sensors – appliance monitor, drawer/door sensors, temperature monitor • Text messages to let personal neighbourhoods know their loved on is up, about, and OK. Not connected to an emergeny response service.

  4. Project background • Delivering Assisted Living Lifestyles at Scale (dallas) project • £23 million • Four communities – iFocus is one of these communities – show how Assisted Living Technologies (ALT) can be used to promote wellbeing, quality health and social care, and to enable people to live independently • Need to demonstrate the services can be provided at sufficient scale and cost to enable independent living • Thinking beyond traditions health and social care provision • dallas aims to help grow the UK ALT sector

  5. Three phases • i-Focus is led by Advanced Digital Institute • HDTI to carry out user evaluation • Three phases: • 2012/13 – Pilot with up to 20 users complete • 2013/14 – Pilot ‘new improved’ service with up to 1000 users – in preparation • 2014/15 – At scale roll out, 10K+ users

  6. How does it work?

  7. Pilot methodology • Co-Creation and initial service design • Living labs and in situ testing

  8. Co-Creation • “Any act of collective creativity, i.e. creativity that is shared by two or more people” (Sanders an Stappers, 2008) • Range of stakeholder participants • Initial service design • Personas • What constitutes OK? • Daily routines • Service journey • What’s in the box?

  9. Winter trial – 2012/13

  10. Winter trial 2012/13 Your friend is active Your friend is inactive Your friend’s house is cold

  11. Results of co-creation • Consensus on concept • Behavioural sensors chosen • Sensors which monitor medical data NOT OK • User controls who receives messages and who can respond • Messages should sound ‘in house’ prior to the neighbourhood being alerted – gives user control to take any actions • SMS text messages • Simple to use, easy to install

  12. Living Labs • Testing the service concept developed from the Co-Creation in situ • Prototype service – repurposed technology – allowed testing of concept without commitment to a final tech solution • Does the concept actually work in the home setting? • How do people receive the service outside of the focus group (‘traditional lab’) situation?

  13. Living Labs • 12 Neighbourhoods • 14 users (two houses had couples as the main users • 19 carers and responders • 3 families had a user with dementia • Users aged 55-85 years • 12 week trial period • Midpoint, endpoint in-depth interviews • Long-table analysis (Krueger & Cassey, 2000)

  14. In situ winter trial results • Overwhelmingly positive feedback • Promoted greater understanding, awareness, reassurance, and involvement between the personal networked neighbourhoods • People liked the focus on positive wellbeing and activity messages • Issues around installation and set up • People disliked the impersonal messaging • Temperature monitor did not work for some household • Possible confusion for people with dementia • All wanted to continue to use the equipment

  15. A participant’s view… • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NsNgaK7hZk

  16. Co-Creation/Living Labs • Users are the knowledge base • Understanding the value of the service from the customers viewpoint • Quick understanding of whether the service works outside of the traditional lab, without commitment to expensive, unsuitable technology • Service designed is fit for purpose • Powerful persuader to take the service to commercialization • Ultimately – satisfied users

  17. Next steps • Further Co-Creation to refine service • New equipment chosen based on user feedback and potential for scalability • Partnered with a large UK energy company, who will be rolling out the new, improved service as a consumer service with up to 1000 users from winter 2013 onwards • Further Living Lab testing, incl. self-install of new ‘plug and play’ equipment

  18. Thank you • Questions? • Further information: nholliday@cueltd.net

More Related