Abstract
Smart homes provide a technologically enhanced environment that helps user’s complete activities of daily living, thus increasing their autonomy. However, predominant use of verbal prompts in smart homes, with little knowledge of their effectiveness, affects significantly their efficiency by providing prompts that are not optimized with the profiles of the users and the characteristics of the tasks. In order for prompts to be effective, they have to compensate the deficits of its users by exploiting their remaining strengths. To contribute solving the issue, we present, in this paper, basic guidelines that are useful for increasing prompt efficiency in smart homes. We identify relevant significant individual profiles and task characteristics that affect prompt efficiency and how to use prompts accordingly. In addition, we illustrate our efforts to validate the proposed guidelines by giving preliminary results from our ongoing experimentations and by presenting the experimental protocol and software application being used.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
References
Giroux, S., Leblanc, T., Bouzouane, A., Bouchard, B., Pigot, H., Beauchet, J.: The Praxis of Cognitive Assistance. In: Gottfried, Aghajan (eds.) Behaviour Monitoring and Interpretation, Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments (AISE), pp. 183–211. IOS, Amsterdam (2009)
Laprise, H., Bouchard, J., Bouchard., B., Bouzouane, A.: Creating tools and trials data sets for smart home researchers. In: Proc. IADIS e-Health, Germany, pp. 143–150 (2010)
Mihailidis, A., Fernie, G.R.: Context-aware assistive devices for older adults with dementia. Gerontechnology 2(2), 173–188 (2002)
Lancioni, G.E., O’Reilly, M.F.: Self-management of instructions cues for occupation: review of studies with people with severe or profound developmental disabilities. Research in Developmental Disabilities 22, 41–65 (2001)
Nailos, M.A., Whitman, T.L., Maxwell, S.E.: Verbal and Visual Instructions with Mental Retardation: The Role of Subject Characteristics and Task Factors. Journal of Behavioral Education 4(2), 201–216 (1994)
Lopresti, E.F., Bodine, C., Lewis, C.: Assistive Technology for Cognition: Understanding the Needs of Persons with Disabilities. IEEE Engineering in Medecine and Biology Magazine 27(2), 29–39 (2008)
LoPresti, E.F., Mihailidis, A., Kirsch, N.: Assistive technology for cognitive rehabilitation: State of the art. Neuropsychological Rehabilitation 14(1/2), 5–39 (2004)
O’Neill, S.A., Mason, S., Parente, G., Donnelly, M.P., Nugent, C.D., McClean, S.: Video Reminders as Cognitive Prosthetics for People with Dementia. Ageing Int. 1, 1–16 (2010)
Wherton, J.P., Monk, A.F.: Technological opportunities for supporting people with dementia who are living at home. Int. J. Human-Computer Studies 66, 571–586 (2008)
Post, M., Montgomery, J., Storey, K.: A decision tree for the use of auditory prompting strategies. Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation 31, 51–54 (2009)
Mcgraw-Hunter, M., Faw, G.D., Davis, P.K.: The use of video self-modelling and feedback to teach cooking skills to individuals with traumatic brain injury: A pilot study. Brain Injury 20(10), 1061–1068 (2006)
Fish, J., Evans, J.J., Nimmo, M., Martin, E., Kersel, D., Batemen, A., et al.: Rehabilitation of executive dysfunction following brain injury: “Content-free” cueing improves everyday prospective memory performance. Neuropsychologia 45, 1318–1330 (2007)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2011 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Van Tassel, M., Bouchard, J., Bouchard, B., Bouzouane, A. (2011). Guidelines for Increasing Prompt Efficiency in Smart Homes According to the Resident’s Profile and Task Characteristics. In: Abdulrazak, B., Giroux, S., Bouchard, B., Pigot, H., Mokhtari, M. (eds) Toward Useful Services for Elderly and People with Disabilities. ICOST 2011. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 6719. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-21535-3_15
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-21535-3_15
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-21534-6
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-21535-3
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)