Zhao Fangyun, Lim Hajin, Morrow Emily L, Turkstra Lyn S, Duff Melissa C, Mutlu Bilge
Department of Computer Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Front Digit Health. 2022 Dec 20;4:991814. doi: 10.3389/fdgth.2022.991814. eCollection 2022.
Adults with traumatic brain injury (TBI) report significant barriers to using current social media platforms, including cognitive overload and challenges in interpreting social cues. Rehabilitation providers may be tasked with helping to address these barriers.
To develop technological supports to increase social media accessibility for people with TBI-related cognitive impairments and to obtain preliminary data on the perceived acceptability, ease of use, and utility of proposed technology aids.
We identified four major barriers to social media use among individuals with TBI: sensory overload, memory impairments, misreading of social cues, and a lack of confidence to actively engage on social media platforms. We describe the process of developing prototypes of support aids aimed at reducing these specific social media barriers. We created mock-ups of these prototypes and asked 46 community-dwelling adults with TBI (24 females) to rate the proposed aids in terms of their acceptability, ease of use, and utility.
Across all aids, nearly one-third of respondents agreed they would use the proposed aids frequently, and the majority of respondents rated the proposed aids as easy to use. Respondents indicated that they would be more likely to use the memory and post-writing aids than the attention and social cue interpretation aids.
Findings provide initial support for social-media-specific technology aids to support social media access and social participation for adults with TBI. Results from this study have design implications for future development of evidence-based social media support aids. Future work should develop and deploy such aids and investigate user experience.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)成年患者表示,使用当前社交媒体平台存在重大障碍,包括认知过载和解读社交线索方面的挑战。康复服务提供者可能需要帮助解决这些障碍。
开发技术支持,以提高患有TBI相关认知障碍的人群使用社交媒体的便利性,并获取关于所提议技术辅助工具的可接受性、易用性和实用性的初步数据。
我们确定了TBI患者使用社交媒体的四大障碍:感官过载、记忆障碍、对社交线索的误读以及缺乏在社交媒体平台上积极参与的信心。我们描述了开发旨在减少这些特定社交媒体障碍的支持辅助工具原型的过程。我们创建了这些原型的模型,并让46名社区居住的TBI成年患者(24名女性)对所提议的辅助工具在可接受性、易用性和实用性方面进行评分。
在所有辅助工具中,近三分之一的受访者表示他们会经常使用所提议的辅助工具,并且大多数受访者认为所提议的辅助工具易于使用。受访者表示,他们使用记忆和写作后辅助工具的可能性高于注意力和社交线索解读辅助工具。
研究结果为支持TBI成年患者使用社交媒体和参与社交活动的特定于社交媒体的技术辅助工具提供了初步支持。本研究结果对基于证据的社交媒体支持辅助工具的未来开发具有设计启示。未来的工作应开发和部署此类辅助工具并调查用户体验。