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Communication Technology in an Aging World

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Title: Communication Technology in an Aging World


1
Communication Technology in an Aging World
  • James L. Fozard
  • Prepared for the Third ISG Masterclass on
    Gerontechnology
  • TUE, Eindhoven NL, 11-12, 2008

2
References in form of electronic files for this
lecture
Fozard, J.L. Impacts of technology on health
and self-esteem. Gerontechnology, 2005,
63-76. Fozard, J.L., Kearns, W.D. Impacts of
technology interventions on communication in
aging and aged persons. In G. Lesnoff-Caravaglia
(Eds.) Gerontechnology Growing old in a
technological society. Springfield, IL Charles
Thomas, 2007, pp.271-291. Kearns, W.D., and
Fozard, J.L. High speed networking and embedded
gerontechnologies. Gerontechnology, 2007, 6,
135-146. The summary for this lecture was
adapted from a paper, Communication
technology changes how we age, by James L.
Fozard and William D. Kearns published in the
Proceedings of the ISG08 Conference held in
Pisa, June, 2008.
3
You are part of a growing group of young
engineers and scientists working in
Gerontechnology. This Masterclass at Nan Kai
University of Technology in May, 2008 was their
second one.
4
Topics of Presentation
  • Aging world, changing communication technologies
  • Communication technology and the goals of
    gerontechnology
  • Prevention
  • Compensation for age limitations in
    sensory-perceptual systems
  • Complex communications involving people and
    machines
  • Care, quality of life
  • Future developments

5
Topics of Presentation
  • Aging world, changing communication technologies
  • Communication technology and the goals of
    gerontechnology
  • Prevention
  • Compensation for age limitations in
    sensory-perceptual systems
  • Complex communications involving people and
    machines
  • Care, quality of life
  • Future developments

6
Projected increases in age distribution in the
world
  • By 2050 20 of the population will be over 60
  • In some developed countries today, the proportion
    of older persons is nearly 20. During the first
    half of the 21st century that proportion will
    reach one in four and in some countries one in
    two.
  • (Source Population Division, Department of
    Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
    Secretariat)

7
USA Census 1975
8
Projected USA Census 2050
9
Rapid changes in the man-made technological
environment
  • A TUE Professor of History of Technology said in
    1993 that some 90 of the advances in technology
    occurred during the 20th century
  • Some examples of widespread technology
    applications since about 1990
  • Internet and e-mail search machines
  • Mobile phone sms
  • Digital camera
  • Navigation tools (GSM)
  • Games
  • Robots
  • Smart products and systems (adaptive)

10
Changing communication technology affects how we
age
  • The experiences with technology we have through
    our first 25 years affects how
  • we adapt to a changing world. Jim, Bill,
    Francesco and Michelle were born in different
    technology generations. Question
  • How will Michelle age?

James Fozard
Bill Kearns
Francesco Franchimon
Michelle Wicklert
11
Communication Technology Changes How We Age
James Fozard
  • How will Michelle age?

Bill Kearns
Francesco Franchimon
Michelle Wicklert
12
Communication Technology Changes How We Age
According the theory of technology generations
used to technology before 25
James Fozard
Bill Kearns
  • How will Michelle age?

Francesco Franchimon
Michelle Wicklert
13
Communication Technology Changes How We Age
According the theory of technology generations
used to technology before 25
James Fozard
Bill Kearns
Francesco Franchimon
  • How will Michelle age?

Michelle Wicklert
14
Communication Technology Changes How We Age
According the theory of technology generations
used to technology before 25
James Fozard
Bill Kearns
Francesco Franchimon
Michelle Wicklert
  • How will Michelle age?

15
Consequences of changing person-environment
interactions
  • Aging society means greater heterogeneity of
    users of technological environments and services
  • Changes in the technological environment increase
    requirements for adaptation by persons of all
    ages who create and use the environment
  • Aged persons often have more difficulty in
    adopting new technology because of long
    experience with older technologyunlearning is
    harder than new learning

16
Topics of Presentation
  • Aging world, changing communication technologies
  • Communication technology and the goals of
    gerontechnology
  • Prevention
  • Compensation for age limitations in
    sensory-perceptual systems
  • Complex communications involving people and
    machines
  • Care, quality of life
  • Future developments

17
Older peoples goalscontinued functional
independence
  • Maintain
  • health as long as possible
  • functional independence in housing,
    transportation, recreation, learning and work
  • financial resources to live independently
  • communication with family and friends
  • Create
  • new social contacts to substitute for those lost
    through death and separation from family
  • Communication technology contributes to all

18
Gerontechnologys four types of intervention
(goals)
  • Prevention and engagementtechnology that delays
    or prevents age-associated physiological and
    behavioral changes that restrict human
    functioning
  • Compensation and assistancetechnology that
    compensates for age-associated losses in strength
    and perceptual-motor functioningthe most
    frequent use
  • Care support and organizationtechnology
  • used by caregivers of elderly persons with
    disabilities, e.g., devices that lift and move
    physically disabled persons,
  • machines that administer and monitor the use of
    medications and
  • equipment that provides information about
    physiological functioning to remote location
  • Enhancement and Satisfaction
  • Improve quality of life at all three levels

19
Communication relates to all of gerontechnologys
goals
  • Prevention Coaching in cardiovascular and
    strength training, available as never before
  • Compensation Smart homes/environments, robots
  • Care/support High quality home based medical and
    rehab services available
  • Enhancement Promote virtual social and artistic
    activities Facilitate shopping, learning and
    work at home

20
Networking can improve coaching in strength
training
  • Prevention is appropriate health-related
    intervention to improve functioning, gait
    quality, lower risk of falls
  • Networking can improve motivation and quality of
    feedback from strength training
  • Reinforcement from sharing information by peers
    doing similar workouts
  • Wearable transducers provide information on
    quality and required number of maneuvers

21
Boston Red Sox Deploy
Activity-Monitoring Technology
SOUTHBOROUGH, MA /BUSINESS WIRE/ -- It's hardly
noticeable, but the Boston Red Sox players are
all wearing a small, wireless, intelligent
pedometer called the ActiPed, from
Massachusetts-based FitSense Technologyit's an
activity monitor that accurately tracks your
every step, the calories you burn, how much time
you've been active, and how far you went in miles.
The ActiHealth network provides physiological
information and feedback tools for health and
wellness program providers that engage and
motivate their members, changing their behaviors
and improving health. The network seamlessly
collects, transports, and presents information on
physical activity, weight, body fat, blood
pressure, heart rate, peak flow, and blood
glucose, for anyone, anytime, anywhere.
22
Technology for compensation and care
interventions
  • Established technologies include
  • Hearing and vision aids
  • Text to speech converters
  • Electronic memory aids
  • Emerging technologies include
  • Smart homes and environments
  • Robots
  • Telemedicine
  • Location aware cueing

23
Compensation Visual Acuity
  • In everyday situations, poor illumination,
    contrast and target characteristics greatly
    reduce acuity and contrast sensitivity of older
    persons.
  • Examples from Japan illustrate lighting and
    contrast needed to reduce/eliminate age
    differences.

24
Visual acuity measured by letter or Landolt Ring
increases as much as 80 with luminance and
brings oldest group almost to level of youngest
at lower luminance levels. Data from Research
Institute of Human Engineering for Quality Life,
Osaka Japan, 1999.
25
Need Multiple Approaches to Improving Image
Quality
  • Applied research on equivalent visibility
    functions across age--using combinations of
    illumination, contrast, and targets
  • Consumer education Mockups of kitchen, home
    office etc. that allow older people to see how to
    improve personal lighting etc. Mockups could be
    in lighting stores, Optician stores, senior
    centers etc.

26
Need Multiple Approaches to Improving Image
Quality
  • Consumer services Small portable lighting aids
    in restaurants for menus and bills better design
    of price tags, directions and prices of
    merchandise.
  • Improved use of electronic reading devices
    flexible print size and contrast.
  • Greater use of digital hearing aids that
    selectively amplify frequencies and suppress very
    high intensity signals

27
Topics of Presentation
  • Aging world, changing communication technologies
  • Communication technology and the goals of
    gerontechnology
  • Prevention
  • Compensation for age limitations in
    sensory-perceptual systems
  • Complex communications involving people and
    machines
  • Care, quality of life
  • Future developments

28
Complex communication systems
  • Nontraditional notions of communication
  • Telemedicine
  • Personal service robot
  • Cell phone as computer networked device
  • Robot as cell phone
  • Cell phone as robot
  • Blending of discrete devices (phone, TV, radio,
    internet, robot) into one seamless communications
    tool

29
Telemedicine, smart houses
  • Cameras, sensors allow remote monitoring and
    treatment of homebound patients
  • Movements and activities similarly monitored with
    extended smart house technologies
  • Mobile-Health Toolkit wirelessly measures blood
    pressure, blood glucose, etc. and relays
    information to patient records

30
Smart Houses
31
Personal service robots
  • Honda Asimo does some chores and caregiving
    under voice, hand gesture control
  • Pearl is used in an assisted living settings
    escorts patients to medical appointments at pace
    set by patient
  • Sony AIBO robotic doll provides 6 simulated
    emotions to actions of person using it
  • PARO a robotic hear seal provides comfort and
    calming to nursing home patients with dementia

32
Networked Robotics
  • Saito, T., Shibata, T., Wada, K. Tanie, K.
    (2003). Relationship between interaction with
    the mental commit robot and change of stress
    reaction of the elderly. Proceedings of the 2003
    IEEE International Symposium on Computational
    Intelligence in Robotics and Automation. July
    16-20, Kobe, Japan.

33
PARO Mental Commit Robot
34
Using location aware technology to manage
wandering in dementia
  • Outdoors GPS based networked services for
    finding lost elders who wander from nursing homes
  • Indoors Ultra-wideband RF systems allow
    placement to within 20 cm within a building
  • Communication technology can be linked to
    location based services to provide instructions
    to patients or to alert caregivers
  • Kearns WD, Algase D, Moore DH, Ahmed S. Ultra
    wideband radio A novel method for measuringh
    wandering persons with dementia. Gerontechnology,
    2008, 7,48-57

35
Ubisense Compact Tag
  • 38mm x 39mm x 16.5mm
  • Weight 25g
  • Affixed by wrist strap or various other methods
  • Battery life exceeds 3 years
  • Indoor range estimated at 183m
  • Update rate variable from 0.01Hz to 20Hz
  • Durable, water resistant and relatively
    unobtrusive

36
Placement of 4 Ubisense sensors in the common
space of an Assisted Living Facility in Tampa,
Florida. Left 2 exits to bedrooms of residents.
Right bottom exit to dining area. Right top
exit from Assisted Living Facility. Area
monitored Approximately 64 X 23 m
37
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39
Complex communication technology--Conclusions
  • Networked technology facilitates people getting
    information about themselves, their environment
    and consumables
  • Coaching, home based medical and rehab services
    available as never before
  • Potential for longitudinal research on aging in
    natural settings is greatly increased
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