Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University of Toronto, 160-500 University Ave, Toronto, ON M5G1V7, Canada.
BMC Geriatr. 2013 Jun 20;13:63. doi: 10.1186/1471-2318-13-63.
Changes in cognition caused by dementia can significantly alter how a person perceives familiarity, impacting the recognition and usability of everyday products. A person who is unable to use products cannot autonomously complete associated activities, resulting in increased dependence on a caregiver and potential move to assisted living facilities. The research presented in this paper hypothesised that products that are more familiar will result in better usability for older adults with dementia. Better product usability could, in turn, potentially support independence and autonomy.
This research investigated the impact of familiarity on the use of five faucet designs during 1309 handwashing trials by 27 older adults, who ranged from cognitively intact to the advanced (severe) stages of dementia. Human factors methods were used to collect empirical and self-reported data to gauge faucets' usability. Participants' data were grouped according to cognition (i.e., no/mild, moderate, or severe dementia). Logistic regression, ranking by odds, and Wald tests of odds ratios were used to compare performance of the three groups on the different faucets. Qualitative data were used in the interpretation of quantitative results.
Results indicated that more familiar faucets correlated with lower levels of assistance from a caregiver, fewer operational errors, and greater levels of operator satisfaction. Aspects such as the ability to control water temperature and flow as well as pleasing aesthetics appeared to positively impact participants' acceptance of a faucet. The dual lever design achieved the best overall usability.
While work must be done to expand these findings to other products and tasks, this research provides evidence that familiarity plays a substantial role in product usability for older adults that appears to become more influential as dementia progresses. The methods used in this research could be adapted to analyse usability for other products by older adults with dementia.
痴呆引起的认知变化会极大地改变一个人对熟悉感的感知,从而影响到日常产品的识别和可用性。无法使用产品的人无法自主完成相关活动,导致对护理人员的依赖增加,并有可能搬到辅助生活设施中。本文提出的研究假设是,更熟悉的产品将为患有痴呆症的老年人带来更好的可用性。更好的产品可用性反过来又可能支持独立性和自主性。
本研究通过对 27 名认知能力从正常到患有严重痴呆的老年人进行 1309 次洗手试验,调查了熟悉度对五种水龙头设计使用的影响。使用人体工程学方法收集经验和自我报告数据,以衡量水龙头的可用性。根据认知能力(即无/轻度、中度或重度痴呆)将参与者的数据分组。使用逻辑回归、赔率排名和 Wald 检验来比较三组在不同水龙头上的表现。使用定性数据来解释定量结果。
结果表明,更熟悉的水龙头与护理人员的帮助程度较低、操作失误较少以及操作人员满意度较高相关。能够控制水温、水流以及美观等方面似乎对参与者对水龙头的接受度产生了积极影响。双杆设计总体上具有最佳的可用性。
虽然必须进一步开展工作,将这些发现扩展到其他产品和任务中,但本研究提供了证据,表明熟悉度在老年人产品可用性中起着重要作用,并且随着痴呆症的发展,其影响力似乎越来越大。本研究中使用的方法可以适应分析患有痴呆症的老年人对其他产品的可用性。