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A Multi-Stage Human Factors and Comfort Assessment of Instrumented Insoles Designed for Use in a Connected Health Infrastructure

Wearable electronics are gaining widespread use as enabling technologies, monitoring human physical activity and behavior as part of connected health infrastructures. Attention to human factors and comfort of these devices can greatly positively influence user experience, with a subsequently higher...

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Autores principales: Harte, Richard, Quinlan, Leo R., Glynn, Liam, Rodriguez-Molinero, Alejandro, Scharf, Thomas, Carenas, Carlos, Reixach, Elisenda, Garcia, Joan, Carrabina, Jordi, ÓLaighin, Gearóid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4695867/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26694468
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm5040487
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author Harte, Richard
Quinlan, Leo R.
Glynn, Liam
Rodriguez-Molinero, Alejandro
Scharf, Thomas
Carenas, Carlos
Reixach, Elisenda
Garcia, Joan
Carrabina, Jordi
ÓLaighin, Gearóid
author_facet Harte, Richard
Quinlan, Leo R.
Glynn, Liam
Rodriguez-Molinero, Alejandro
Scharf, Thomas
Carenas, Carlos
Reixach, Elisenda
Garcia, Joan
Carrabina, Jordi
ÓLaighin, Gearóid
author_sort Harte, Richard
collection PubMed
description Wearable electronics are gaining widespread use as enabling technologies, monitoring human physical activity and behavior as part of connected health infrastructures. Attention to human factors and comfort of these devices can greatly positively influence user experience, with a subsequently higher likelihood of user acceptance and lower levels of device rejection. Here, we employ a human factors and comfort assessment methodology grounded in the principles of human-centered design to influence and enhance the design of an instrumented insole. A use case was developed and interrogated by stakeholders, experts, and end users, capturing the context of use and user characteristics for the instrumented insole. This use case informed all stages of the design process through two full design cycles, leading to the development of an initial version 1 and a later version 2 prototype. Each version of the prototype was subjected to an expert human factors inspection and controlled comfort assessment using human volunteers. Structured feedback from the first cycle of testing was the driver of design changes implemented in the version 2 prototype. This prototype was found to have significantly improved human factors and comfort characteristics over the first version of the prototype. Expert inspection found that many of the original problems in the first prototype had been resolved in the second prototype. Furthermore, a comfort assessment of this prototype with a group of young healthy adults showed it to be indistinguishable from their normal footwear. This study demonstrates the power and effectiveness of human factors and comfort assessment methodologies in influencing and improving the design of wearable devices.
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spelling pubmed-46958672016-01-19 A Multi-Stage Human Factors and Comfort Assessment of Instrumented Insoles Designed for Use in a Connected Health Infrastructure Harte, Richard Quinlan, Leo R. Glynn, Liam Rodriguez-Molinero, Alejandro Scharf, Thomas Carenas, Carlos Reixach, Elisenda Garcia, Joan Carrabina, Jordi ÓLaighin, Gearóid J Pers Med Article Wearable electronics are gaining widespread use as enabling technologies, monitoring human physical activity and behavior as part of connected health infrastructures. Attention to human factors and comfort of these devices can greatly positively influence user experience, with a subsequently higher likelihood of user acceptance and lower levels of device rejection. Here, we employ a human factors and comfort assessment methodology grounded in the principles of human-centered design to influence and enhance the design of an instrumented insole. A use case was developed and interrogated by stakeholders, experts, and end users, capturing the context of use and user characteristics for the instrumented insole. This use case informed all stages of the design process through two full design cycles, leading to the development of an initial version 1 and a later version 2 prototype. Each version of the prototype was subjected to an expert human factors inspection and controlled comfort assessment using human volunteers. Structured feedback from the first cycle of testing was the driver of design changes implemented in the version 2 prototype. This prototype was found to have significantly improved human factors and comfort characteristics over the first version of the prototype. Expert inspection found that many of the original problems in the first prototype had been resolved in the second prototype. Furthermore, a comfort assessment of this prototype with a group of young healthy adults showed it to be indistinguishable from their normal footwear. This study demonstrates the power and effectiveness of human factors and comfort assessment methodologies in influencing and improving the design of wearable devices. MDPI 2015-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC4695867/ /pubmed/26694468 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm5040487 Text en © 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Harte, Richard
Quinlan, Leo R.
Glynn, Liam
Rodriguez-Molinero, Alejandro
Scharf, Thomas
Carenas, Carlos
Reixach, Elisenda
Garcia, Joan
Carrabina, Jordi
ÓLaighin, Gearóid
A Multi-Stage Human Factors and Comfort Assessment of Instrumented Insoles Designed for Use in a Connected Health Infrastructure
title A Multi-Stage Human Factors and Comfort Assessment of Instrumented Insoles Designed for Use in a Connected Health Infrastructure
title_full A Multi-Stage Human Factors and Comfort Assessment of Instrumented Insoles Designed for Use in a Connected Health Infrastructure
title_fullStr A Multi-Stage Human Factors and Comfort Assessment of Instrumented Insoles Designed for Use in a Connected Health Infrastructure
title_full_unstemmed A Multi-Stage Human Factors and Comfort Assessment of Instrumented Insoles Designed for Use in a Connected Health Infrastructure
title_short A Multi-Stage Human Factors and Comfort Assessment of Instrumented Insoles Designed for Use in a Connected Health Infrastructure
title_sort multi-stage human factors and comfort assessment of instrumented insoles designed for use in a connected health infrastructure
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4695867/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26694468
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm5040487
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