posted on 2020-03-09, 15:05authored byDaniel Gooch, Vikram Mehta, Blaine A. Price, Ciaran McCormick, Arosha K. Bandara, Amel Bennaceur, Mohamed Bennasar, Avelie Stuart, Linda Clare, Mark Levine, Jessica Cohen, Bashar NuseibehBashar Nuseibeh
The global population is ageing, leading to shifts in healthcare
needs. Home healthcare monitoring systems currently
focus on physical health, but there is an increasing recognition
that psychological wellbeing also needs support. This
raises the question of how to design devices that older adults
can interact with to log their feelings. We designed three
tangible prototypes, based on existing paper-based scales
of affect. We report findings from a lab study in which participants
used the prototypes to log the emotion from standardised
emotional vignettes. We found that the prototypes
allowed participants to accurately record identified emotions
in a reasonable time. Our participants expressed a perceived
need to record emotions, either to share with family/carers or
for self-reflection. We conclude that our work demonstrates the potential for in-home tangible devices for recording the
emotions of older adults to support wellbeing.