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Feasibility of wearable-based collective sensing to detect environmental barriers for facilitating the elderly's mobilityoa mark
  • Lee, G. ;
  • Choi, B. ;
  • Ahn, C. R. ;
  • Lee, S.
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Publication Year
2019-01-01
Journal
International Conference on Smart Infrastructure and Construction 2019, ICSIC 2019: Driving Data-Informed Decision-Making
Publisher
ICE Publishing
Citation
International Conference on Smart Infrastructure and Construction 2019, ICSIC 2019: Driving Data-Informed Decision-Making, pp.143-149
Mesh Keyword
Aging societiesBuilt environmentDaily livesLabour-intensiveLocation dataMultiple peopleSite surveysTest site
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Building and ConstructionCivil and Structural Engineering
Abstract
In our aging society, the elderly's mobility has become critical for our collective prosperity. However, the elderly's mobility is limited in the current built environment due to various types of environmental barriers. Manual surveys have been conducted to detect such environmental barriers, but they are discontinuous, invasive to the elderly's daily lives, and labour-intensive. As such, these methods are not ideal for wider adoption. To continuously, less-invasively, and less-laboriously detect the environmental barriers and advance the elderly's mobility, this study proposes a wearable-based collective sensing approach. This approach measures collective stress, the stress commonly sensed from multiple people on a location, as an indicator of environmental barriers based on people's physiological and location data collected by wearable sensors. To test the feasibility of the proposed approach, a "collective stress metric" is suggested. Then, the values of the collective stress metric on locations of the test site were calculated based on the physiological and location data collected from 10 elderly subjects' daily trips for 2 weeks. Then, every location on the test site was categorized into locations "with environmental barriers" and "without environmental barriers" through site survey. Based on the collected data and results of site survey, the collective stress was statistically compared between locations with environmental barriers and without barriers. The result showed that the collective stress was statistically higher on locations with environmental barriers than without barriers. The results demonstrated that the collective stress has indication of environmental barriers, therefore, the proposed approach is feasible to detect the elderly's environmental barriers.
Language
eng
URI
https://aurora.ajou.ac.kr/handle/2018.oak/36493
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85094979917&origin=inward
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1680/icsic.64669.143
Type
Conference
Funding
This study was supported by the Exercise and Sport Science Initiative (ESSI-2018-4), the Urban Collaboratory in the University of Michigan, and the National Science Foundation - United States (# 1800310). Also, the authors wish to acknowledge Brenda Stumbo, Ypsilanti Township Supervisor, and Denise M. McKalpain, Service Coordinator at Clark East Tower for their help in data collection.
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