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Mobility for All Can one size fit all?. Universal Access and the Universe of One “There is no such thing as the average person.” –Don Norman, The Design.

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Presentation on theme: "Mobility for All Can one size fit all?. Universal Access and the Universe of One “There is no such thing as the average person.” –Don Norman, The Design."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mobility for All Can one size fit all?

2 Universal Access and the Universe of One “There is no such thing as the average person.” –Don Norman, The Design of everyday Things Designers are often required to develop a single solution for everyone—but this is impossible A little perspective –US Pop. = 281 million –People w/ severe disability = 12% or 33 million –Even if you could design for the 99 th percentile, 1% or 2.8 million will be left out! Universal access ≠ One size fits all

3 Designing with atoms vs. bits The world of atoms is less malleable that the world of bits Consider bus maps and schedules Reality of Printed Maps Represent plans Person must adapt to a one-size-fits-all representation Personalized maps are expensive—not scalable—not feasible? Cheap short-term cost—mass production

4 Designing with atoms vs. bits Reality of Printed Maps Represent plans Person must adapt to a one-size- fits-all representation Personalized maps are expensive—not scalable—not feasible? Cheap short-term cost—mass production Potential of Digital Maps Represent reality Representation can dynamically adapt to the task and person Scalability is relatively cheap— distribution is simple Cheaper in the long-term? The world of atoms is less malleable that the world of bits Consider bus maps and schedules

5 User Models understanding the user Different usage patterns between familiar and unfamiliar users FamiliarUnfamiliar Behavior Have learned (habituated) over time—they act Rely heavily on procedural knowledge—plan—wait— act Possible Errors Capture errors—intended sequence is overridden by a familiar, unintended sequence Errors in thought—error in the planning procedure Possible Fix Evaluation—Plan vs. Actions Timely feedback Eliminate need for planning Guided planning Claim: Usage patterns and needs are disability-dependant –Some people need constant reminders of the goal –Some people need to focus on the task steps and may be overloaded by excessive reminders

6 Using User and Task Models Know the user –work with specialists to develop a taxonomy of cognitive (dis)ability. –Gardner’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences –develop an architecture to map representations onto a taxonomy of cognitive (dis)abilities Know the user’s goals –context aware systems that will “know” what task they are trying to accomplish –what can be inferred from the environment?

7 Adaptable and Adaptive Systems Systems need to be adaptive so they can keep pace as users improve and degrade in task performance. –routine tasks can become habituated—are some types of users more/less likely to habituate? –habituated tasks can be forgotten if not active or as disability degenerates—what types of disabilities are more/less likely to be affected? Systems need to be adaptable so that caretakers can tailor the interaction experience for those in their care.

8 Envision model 1.Caretaker primes the system with formal and informal information about their charge 2.Based on caretaker’s description, the user in mapped onto disability taxonomy and system acts based on that mapping 3.Caretaker then acts as a moderator continuously monitors the human-computer collaboration provides feedback to both human and computer. 4.Caretaker’s feedback updates the user description, the person is remapped within the taxonomy, and the cycle continues

9 Envision model Prescribe (2) Evaluate (3) Describe (1 & 4) 1.Caretaker primes the system with formal and informal information about their charge 2.Based on caretaker’s description, the user in mapped onto disability taxonomy and system acts based on that mapping 3.Caretaker then acts as a moderator continuously monitors the human- computer collaboration provides feedback to both human and computer. 4.Caretaker’s feedback updates the user description, the person is remapped within the taxonomy, and the cycle continues

10 Examples Context Awareness –Knows where the user is located—GPS Coordinates -> Zip Code –Knows local weather –Knows that arriving bus looks similar to target bus -> avoid description errors –Knows that is Sunday—no work User Model –Knows the user’s schedule –Knows what activities are available At a given time With given weather conditions –Knows that the users should not cross streets and generates appropriate route plan –Knows that the user tends to fall a sleep on buses—reminds bus driver to prompt user if necessary –Knows current activity is novel, but very similar to another highly familiar activity—get milk on the way home from work -> avoid capture errors

11 System Architecture (First Draft) User Model Activity dB Context Analyzer Zip code Data Weather Data GPS Data Activity Planner Caretaker Describes Monitors Feeds back Activity Monitor User Selects/Performs Activities


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