Wang Chang-Yueh, Lin Fang-Suey
Graduate School of Design, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology, Yunlin 64002, Taiwan.
Healthcare (Basel). 2023 Jun 1;11(11):1616. doi: 10.3390/healthcare11111616.
Taiwan has a rapidly increasing aging population with a considerably high life expectancy rate, which poses challenges for healthcare and medical systems. This study examines three key factors: safety concerns, family expectations, and privacy concerns, and their influence on surveillance system installation decisions. A cross-sectional study was conducted involving a group of physically active older adults in Taiwan, using a questionnaire to collect data on the reasons for in-stalling a surveillance system and preferences for three image privacy protection techniques: blurring the face and transformation to a 2D or 3D character. The study concluded that while safety concerns and family expectations facilitate the adoption of surveillance systems, privacy concerns serve as a significant barrier. Furthermore, older adults showed a clear preference for avatar-based privacy protection methods over simpler techniques, such as blurring. The outcomes of this research will be instrumental in shaping the development of privacy-conscious home surveillance technologies, adeptly balancing safety and privacy. This understanding can pave the way for technology design that skillfully balances privacy concerns with remote monitoring quality, thereby enhancing the well-being and safety of this demographic. These results could possibly be extended to other demographics as well.
台湾的老年人口迅速增加,预期寿命相当高,这给医疗保健和医疗系统带来了挑战。本研究考察了三个关键因素:安全担忧、家庭期望和隐私担忧,以及它们对监控系统安装决策的影响。对台湾一群身体活跃的老年人进行了一项横断面研究,使用问卷调查收集安装监控系统的原因以及对三种图像隐私保护技术的偏好:面部模糊和转换为二维或三维角色。研究得出结论,虽然安全担忧和家庭期望促进了监控系统的采用,但隐私担忧是一个重大障碍。此外,老年人对基于虚拟形象的隐私保护方法的偏好明显高于面部模糊等更简单的技术。本研究结果将有助于塑造注重隐私的家庭监控技术的发展,巧妙地平衡安全和隐私。这种理解可为巧妙地平衡隐私担忧与远程监控质量的技术设计铺平道路,从而提高这一人群的福祉和安全性。这些结果也可能推广到其他人群。