Frameworks Cook and Hussey, Chapter 2 Damian Gordon.
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Transcript of Frameworks Cook and Hussey, Chapter 2 Damian Gordon.
FrameworksCook and Hussey, Chapter 2
Damian Gordon
Last Week
What is Assistive Technology?
“Any product, instrument, equipment or technical system used by a disabled or elderly person, made specially or existing on the market, aimed to prevent, compensate, relieve or neutralise the deficiency, the inability or the handicap.”International ISO-9999 Standard
What is Assistive Technology?
They allow – someone (a person with a disability) – to do something (an activity) – somewhere (within a context)
What is Assistive Technology?
The goal of the AT practitioner is to recommend an AT device that meets their needs, and is consistent with their skills, and allows them to accomplish the unique functions they want.
What is Assistive Technology?
It is important to note that we are less concerned with the remediation of a disability as we are with enabling functional results and helping the individual to accomplish what he or she wants.
CASE STUDY: Marion
Marion is a teenage girl with spastic cerebral palsy that affects all four limbs. Because of these motor impairments she is unable to speak or write. During conversations her facial expressions do not appear to mirror her feelings.
CASE STUDY: Marion
Marion uses a language board to communication by pointing at letters and spelling out words. Output using this means is very slow, so she also uses a voice output communication aid (VOCA) that generates speech electronically which increases her rate of communication.
CASE STUDY: Marion
Marion communicates with others in many different contexts, including friends and peers at school, in social situations, family, and less familiar individuals.
CASE STUDY: Marion
Marion uses her communication board when with friends in a school setting, here both the people she is in conversation with, and the setting are familiar, so it is not necessary to spell individual words out. Friends can anticipate what Marion wants to say, thus increasing her rate of communication.
CASE STUDY: Marion
Marion prefers to use the VOCA in less familiar situations and when dealing with unfamiliar people, because they cannot be depended upon to anticipate what Marion intends to say.
The HAAT Model
The HAAT Model
The Human Activity Assistive Technology Model proposes a framework for understanding the place of assistive technologies in the place of the lives of those with disabilities.
The model has four components – the human, the activity, the assistive technology, and the context in which all three of these exist.
HAAT Model
The HAAT Model
Each component must be considered both individually and with the others with considering, designing, selecting, implementing, and evaluating an appropriate assistive technology device.
HAAT Model
HAAT Model
HAAT Model
HAAT Model
- Self Care- Productivity- Leisure
The HAAT Model
The Activity– This is the process of doing something, and it
represents the functional result of human performance.
– Activities are carried out as part of our daily living, are necessary to human existence, can be learned, and are governed by the society and culture in which we live.
The HAAT Model
The Activity– Three basic performance areas
Daily living Work and productive activities Play and leisure activity
The HAAT Model
The Activity– Three basic performance areas
Daily living– Dressing, hygiene, grooming, bathing, eating,
communication, health maintenance, socialization, taking medications, sexual expression, responding to an emergency, and mobility
Work and productive activities Play and leisure activity
The HAAT Model
The Activity– Three basic performance areas
Daily living– Dressing, hygiene, grooming, bathing, eating,
communication, health maintenance, socialization, taking medications, sexual expression, responding to an emergency, and mobility
Work and productive activities– Home management activities, educational activities,
vocational activities, and care of others Play and leisure activity
The HAAT Model
The Activity– Three basic performance areas
Daily living– Dressing, hygiene, grooming, bathing, eating,
communication, health maintenance, socialization, taking medications, sexual expression, responding to an emergency, and mobility
Work and productive activities– Home management activities, educational activities,
vocational activities, and care of others Play and leisure activity
– Activities related to self-expression, enjoyment, or relaxation
The HAAT Model
The Activity– This is not to say that specific activities fit neatly
into these categorisations, the reality is that the meaning an individual gives to an activity determines in which performance area it is placed
The HAAT Model
The Activity– e.g., gardening may be a productive activity for
one person and a leisure activity for another.
The HAAT Model
The Activity– e.g., a parent reading to a child reads in a
different way than when that reading is performed as part of someone’s role as a student or worker.
The HAAT Model
The Activity– We can break down activities into a series of
tasks. – The skills and abilities intrinsic to the human allow
the individual to complete a series of tasks to produce the functional outcome of the activity.
The HAAT Model
The Activity– When an individual lacks the capacity to complete
a task, the manner in which that task is completed including the use of AT, must be changed.
HAAT Model
-Physical-Cognitive-Emotional-Novice vs. Expert
The HAAT Model
The Human – The components we consider the person includes
Physical Cognitive (brain stuff) Affective
The HAAT Model
The Human – The components we consider the person includes
Physical– Strength, coordination, range of motion, balance, and
other physical properties Cognitive Affective
The HAAT Model
The Human – The components we consider the person includes
Physical– Strength, coordination, range of motion, balance, and
other physical properties Cognitive
– Attention, judgement, problem solving, concentration, and alertness
Affective
The HAAT Model
The Human – The components we consider the person includes
Physical– Strength, coordination, range of motion, balance, and
other physical properties Cognitive
– Attention, judgement, problem solving, concentration, and alertness
Affective – Emotional elements
The HAAT Model
The Human – Skills and Abilities: It is possible to
distinguish between a person’s skills and abilities. An ability is a basic trait of a person, what a
person brings to a task, a skill is a level of proficiency
The HAAT Model
The Human – Skills and Abilities: In AT this distinction is
very important, it is possible to assess a person’s abilities, but it is difficult to predict the level of skill someone will develop using a technology
– e.g. a person might develop skill in the use of a joystick as a computer interface and then transfer this motor skill to the use of a power wheelchair.
– So the acquired skill in the first task, becomes an ability that can be used in the second task.
The HAAT Model
The Human – Novice versus Expert User: The term
Novice User describes a user of AT who has little or no experience in using that system, or task for which it is used. The term Expert User describes a user of an AT system that has significant experience with that system.
The HAAT Model
The Human – The Novice: More likely to use the system in
prescribed ways, less likely to generalize use of the system from one task to another, and must use more conscious effort to control it.
– The Expert: Takes more risks with the equipment, in terms of stretching the way it can be used and trying new activities with the system, and an expert exerts less conscious effort.
HAAT Model
-Physical-Social -Cultural-Institutional
The HAAT Model
The Context– As mentioned previously the move from focusing
on disability as a medical flaw or impairment (starting around the 1950s), to identifying the environmental factors which provide barriers to the disabled person (in the 1990s).
– So rather than focusing on disabled people as a “minority group model” the move toward universalism advocates broader social justice and policies and that are more inclusive of all persons.
The HAAT Model
The Context– The four major considerations in context are;
Physical context Social context Cultural context Institutional context
The HAAT Model
The Context– Physical context– This is easy to understand. – The physical attributes of the environment that
enable, hinder, or affect performance of daily activities, with or without AT.
– It is important to realise that an AT device that works in one environment may not work in another.
The HAAT Model
The Context– Physical context– e.g. Voice recognition software may work in a
quiet home setting, but may not in a noisy, office environment
The HAAT Model
The Context– Physical context– It is important to distinguish between the natural
and the built environment.– Is the user intending to use an AT device in both
contexts?– e.g. Wheelchair tire thread depth
The HAAT Model
The Context– Physical context– Three commonly measured parameters are;
Heat (related to temperature) Light Sound
The HAAT Model
The Context– Physical context– Heat– e.g. the properties of foams and gels used in seat
cushions can change under very high or low temperatures.
– e.g. Liquid Crystal Displays are affected by temperature
The HAAT Model
The Context– Physical context– Light– e.g. Liquid Crystal Displays are affected by
ambient light– e.g. Light in classrooms might be too bright for
computer screens as they may cause glare
The HAAT Model
The Context– Physical context– Sound– Ambient noise has a significant impact on the
intelligibility of voice synthesizers and voice recognition systems.
The HAAT Model
The Context– Social context– This refers to all of the individuals who interact
with the individual who uses the assistive technology, either directly or indirectly.
– Their acceptance or rejection of the AT is a critical component of whether or not the individual using the AT will be successful with it.
The HAAT Model
The Context– Social context– People with disabilities comment that the social
environment, the attitude of others, creates more of a handicap that the physical barriers in the environment.
– The use of AT can further contribute to this stigmatization and lead to further isolation.
The HAAT Model
The Context– Social context– The individuals closest to the individual, such as
family, friends, teachers, or co-workers, have a significant impact on the AT being used and understand the individual’s capacities.
The HAAT Model
The Context– Social context– When help with technology is provided
consistently by the same individuals, problems with the AT are lessened
– When help is provided by a variety of individuals, this may result in inefficient and incorrect of the AT.
The HAAT Model
The Context– Cultural context– We all view the world through a “cultural screen”
that is the product of our experiences, family relationships, heritage, and many other factors.
– If an AT provider and the consumer have different cultural views, they may have difficulties establishing and achieving mutual goals.
The HAAT Model
The Context– Cultural context– e.g. the AT provider may feel that leisure activities
are desirable and satisfying goals, and may recommend AT systems that incorporate computer games systems, however if the individual is from a culture that sees leisure as being non-productive, he or she may reject the whole set of systems.
The HAAT Model
The Context– Cultural context– e.g. wheelchair manufacturers now fabricate their
products in a variety of colours, which allow users to choose and avoid the “institutional chrome”
The HAAT Model
The Context– Institutional context– This refers to those responsible for policy-making,
decision-making, processes, and procedures.– This includes economical, legal, and political
components.– Funding is probably the most influential element
in this context.
The HAAT Model
The Context– Institutional context– Funding policies and regulations establish who is
eligible to receive assistance for the purchase of devices, which devices are supported in funding schemes
The HAAT Model
The Context– Institutional context– Legislation establishes laws, policies, and regulations that
enable persons with disabilities to engage in activities in various contexts with both their local community and more broadly.
– The laws comment on environmental access issues, modifications required in workplace environment, and educational and other settings.
– Legislation also covers product design, function, and safety standards.
HAAT Model-HTI-Activity Output-Processor-Environmental Interface
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Assistive Technologies are also known as extrinsic
enablers because they provide the basis by which human performance is improved in the presence of disability.
– AT may have any subset or all of the follow components; HTI Activity Output Processor Environmental Interface
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Components– Interaction between HUMAN and AT is via the
HTI (Human-Technology Interface) component of the AT. The interaction is two-way.
– For the AT to contribute to functional performance, it must provide an output, which is achieved by an Activity Output component
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Components
– The Processor links the HCI and the Activity Output , which translates information and forces received from human signals into signals that are used to control the Activity Output.
– Finally, some AT must also be capable of detecting
environmental data, the Environmental Interface accomplishes this function, and this links to the processor to provide environment information to the user via the HCI.
HAAT Model
HAAT Model
ActivityOutput
Processor
EnvironmentalInterface
HTI
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Human Technology Interface– Consider, for example, a computer keyboard and
video monitor, with the keyboard providing input and the monitor providing output
– Sometimes only one device is needed to provide both input and output, e.g. the keyboard can also provide tactile, auditory, and visual feedback to the user.
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Human Technology Interface– Positioning Devices and Postural
Support Systems, are a common type of HTI. – You have to be stable and in a position to
successfully interact with your environment, but some individuals have insufficient postural control to support efficient and effective movements needs for this interaction.
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Human Technology Interface– Another commonly used interface is called the
Control Interface. – This category includes joysticks for power
wheelchairs, keyboards for computers and communication devices, and single switches used to control household devices.
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Human Technology Interface– Displays that provide information to the user
are present in a wide range of AT devices, from power wheelchairs to computers.
– e.g. the lighted display showing remaining battery power on powered wheelchairs
– The major types of displays are visual, auditory (including synthesised speech), tactile (including Braille).
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Processor– Many AT devices require control and
processing of data to accomplish their desired functional task.
– The Processor is often a computer which performs these functions
– These greatly increase flexibility and adaptability in performing functional tasks and also allow systems to be tailored to individual needs much more readily.
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Processor– The processor may also be a simple mechanical
competent to link the (HTI) Control Interface to the Activity Output.
– e.g. A mechanical reacher to reach objects on high shelves. The user controls the reacher through a hand grasp, which is coupled with a mechanical linkage that closes a gripper to reach and carry an object.
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Activity Outputs– These include communication, moving from
place-to-place, objects for self-care, work, school, or recreation, and performing cognitive activities.
– Activities can be either replaced with a functional equivalent or augmented.
Replaced: e.g. a computer word processor for someone who cannot use a pencil and paper
Augmented: e.g. a holder that allows someone with a limited grip to manipulate a pencil
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Activity Outputs– The outputs can include
Communication Manipulation Mobility Cognition
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Activity Outputs– Devices for manipulation are either special
purpose (e.g. a modified spoon) or general purpose (e.g. robotic systems).
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Environmental Interface– This provides the link between the device and the
external world (or context).
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Environmental Interface– This interface supports sensory performance:
Seeing Hearing Feeling
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Environmental Interface– This interface supports sensory performance:
Seeing– a camera capable of imaging information can be used as
augmentation or replacement. Two broad classes of performance are typically aided: reading, and mobility for persons with visual impairment
Hearing Feeling
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Environmental Interface– This interface supports sensory performance:
Seeing– a camera capable of imaging information can be used as
augmentation or replacement. Two broad classes of performance are typically aided: reading, and mobility for persons with visual impairment
Hearing– Systems for hearing often include microphones
Feeling
The HAAT Model
Assistive Technology– Environmental Interface– This interface supports sensory performance:
Seeing– a camera capable of imaging information can be used as
augmentation or replacement. Two broad classes of performance are typically aided: reading, and mobility for persons with visual impairment
Hearing– Systems for hearing often include microphones
Feeling– Systems that use transducers to detect external pressures
or forces
HAAT Model
-Physical-Cognitive-Emotional-Novice vs. Expert
-Physical-Social -Cultural-Institutional
- Self Care- Productivity- Leisure
-HTI-Activity Output-Processor-Environmental Interface
Individual and Group Challenge
The earliest record of wheelchairs date back to the 6th century, and were found inscribed on a stone slate in China.
Redesign the wheelchair for the 21st century, consider the new materials, methods of propulsion, etc. (15 mins.)
Now combine you ideas together in pairs. (10 mins.)
Come up to the board and draw a picture.