Motivating mobility : designing for lived motivation in stroke rehabilitation. / Balaam, Madeline; Egglestone, Stefan Rennick; Fitzpatrick, Geraldine; Rodden, Tom; Hughes, Ann-Marie; Wilkinson, Anna; Nind, Thomas; Axelrod, Lesley; Harris, Eric; Ricketts, Ian; Mawson, Susan; Burridge, Jane.
CHI '11: Proceedings of the 2011 annual conference on Human factors in computing systems. New York : Association for Computing Machinery, 2011. p. 3073-3082.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Other chapter contribution
}
TY - CHAP
T1 - Motivating mobility
T2 - CHI '11
A1 - Balaam,Madeline
A1 - Egglestone,Stefan Rennick
A1 - Fitzpatrick,Geraldine
A1 - Rodden,Tom
A1 - Hughes,Ann-Marie
A1 - Wilkinson,Anna
A1 - Nind,Thomas
A1 - Axelrod,Lesley
A1 - Harris,Eric
A1 - Ricketts,Ian
A1 - Mawson,Susan
A1 - Burridge,Jane
AU - Balaam,Madeline
AU - Egglestone,Stefan Rennick
AU - Fitzpatrick,Geraldine
AU - Rodden,Tom
AU - Hughes,Ann-Marie
AU - Wilkinson,Anna
AU - Nind,Thomas
AU - Axelrod,Lesley
AU - Harris,Eric
AU - Ricketts,Ian
AU - Mawson,Susan
AU - Burridge,Jane
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
CY - New York
PY - 2011/1/1
Y1 - 2011/1/1
N2 - How to motivate and support behaviour change through design is becoming of increasing interest to the CHI community. In this paper, we present our experiences of building systems that motivate people to engage in upper limb rehabilitation exercise after stroke. We report on participatory design work with four stroke survivors to develop a holistic understanding of their motivation and rehabilitation needs, and to construct and deploy engaging interactive systems that satisfy these. We reflect on the limits of motivational theories in trying to design for the lived experience of motivation and highlight lessons learnt around: helping people articulate what motivates them; balancing work, duty, fun; supporting motivation over time; and understanding the wider social context. From these we identify design guidelines that can inform a toolkit approach to support both scalability and personalisability. Copyright 2011 ACM.
AB - How to motivate and support behaviour change through design is becoming of increasing interest to the CHI community. In this paper, we present our experiences of building systems that motivate people to engage in upper limb rehabilitation exercise after stroke. We report on participatory design work with four stroke survivors to develop a holistic understanding of their motivation and rehabilitation needs, and to construct and deploy engaging interactive systems that satisfy these. We reflect on the limits of motivational theories in trying to design for the lived experience of motivation and highlight lessons learnt around: helping people articulate what motivates them; balancing work, duty, fun; supporting motivation over time; and understanding the wider social context. From these we identify design guidelines that can inform a toolkit approach to support both scalability and personalisability. Copyright 2011 ACM.
KW - Rehabilitation
KW - Motivation
KW - Behavior change
KW - Stroke
KW - Home
KW - Design
KW - Human factors
KW - Information interfaces and presentation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?partnerID=yv4JPVwI&eid=2-s2.0-79958109907&md5=d9ed168ad92b51a4d811f841d88a9d41
U2 - 10.1145/1978942.1979397
DO - 10.1145/1978942.1979397
M1 - Other chapter contribution
SN - 9781450302678
BT - CHI '11
SP - 3073
EP - 3082
ER -