Canine-centered interface design: supporting the work of diabetes alert dogs
Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on human factors in computing systems, 2014•dl.acm.org
Many people with Diabetes live with the continuous threat of hypoglycemic attacks and the
danger of going into coma. Diabetes Alert Dogs are trained to detect the onset of an attack
before the condition of the human handler they are paired with deteriorates, giving them time
to take action. We investigated requirements for designing an alarm system allowing dogs to
remotely call for help when their human falls unconscious before being able to react to an
alert. Through a multispecies ethnographic approach we focus on the requirements for a …
danger of going into coma. Diabetes Alert Dogs are trained to detect the onset of an attack
before the condition of the human handler they are paired with deteriorates, giving them time
to take action. We investigated requirements for designing an alarm system allowing dogs to
remotely call for help when their human falls unconscious before being able to react to an
alert. Through a multispecies ethnographic approach we focus on the requirements for a …
Many people with Diabetes live with the continuous threat of hypoglycemic attacks and the danger of going into coma. Diabetes Alert Dogs are trained to detect the onset of an attack before the condition of the human handler they are paired with deteriorates, giving them time to take action. We investigated requirements for designing an alarm system allowing dogs to remotely call for help when their human falls unconscious before being able to react to an alert. Through a multispecies ethnographic approach we focus on the requirements for a physical canine user interface, involving dogs, their handlers and specialist dog trainers in the design process. We discuss tensions between the requirements for canine and the human users, argue the need for increased sensitivity towards the needs of individual dogs that goes beyond breed specific physical characteristics, and reflect on how we can move from designing for dogs to designing with dogs.
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