Stollnberger, Gerald; Moser, Christiane; Beck, Elke; Zenz, Cornelia; Tscheligi, Manfred; Szczesniak-Stanczyk, Dorota; Janowski, Marcin; Brzozowski, Wojciech; Blaszczyk, Regina L; Mazur, Michał; Wysokinski, Mariusz Robotic Systems in Health Care Inproceedings Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Human System Interaction, pp. 276–281, 2014. Abstract | Links | BibTeX @inproceedings{Stollnberger2014a,
title = {Robotic Systems in Health Care},
author = {Gerald Stollnberger and Christiane Moser and Elke Beck and Cornelia Zenz and Manfred Tscheligi and Dorota Szczesniak-Stanczyk and Marcin Janowski and Wojciech Brzozowski and Regina L Blaszczyk and Micha\l Mazur and Mariusz Wysokinski},
doi = {10.1109/HSI.2014.6860489},
year = {2014},
date = {2014-01-01},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Human System Interaction},
pages = {276--281},
abstract = {This paper reflects on a novel concept ofrobotization in the health care sector. The idea is to design arobotic system capable of performing remote physicalexamination with palpation (i.e., pressing a patient's stomach toidentify pain regions and stiffness of organs) andultrasonography. The medical robotic system will consist of aremote haptic interface for the doctor and a robot located at thepatient's side supported by an assistant. In two countries(Austria and Poland), we conducted first focus groups withdoctors in order to identify how the remote medical diagnosticiansystem is assessed and conceptualized regarding the examinationprocedures (activities), communication issues, and thevisualization of needed information. Based on the findings, wewill reflect on the technology assessment, i.e., if remote medicalservices can be a suitable possibility for rural areas where theavailability of doctors with various specializations is often aproblem, as well as necessities for this novel type of medicaltreatment from a doctor's point of view (i.e., identified aspectsincreasing acceptance and adoption by users of the system).},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
This paper reflects on a novel concept ofrobotization in the health care sector. The idea is to design arobotic system capable of performing remote physicalexamination with palpation (i.e., pressing a patient's stomach toidentify pain regions and stiffness of organs) andultrasonography. The medical robotic system will consist of aremote haptic interface for the doctor and a robot located at thepatient's side supported by an assistant. In two countries(Austria and Poland), we conducted first focus groups withdoctors in order to identify how the remote medical diagnosticiansystem is assessed and conceptualized regarding the examinationprocedures (activities), communication issues, and thevisualization of needed information. Based on the findings, wewill reflect on the technology assessment, i.e., if remote medicalservices can be a suitable possibility for rural areas where theavailability of doctors with various specializations is often aproblem, as well as necessities for this novel type of medicaltreatment from a doctor's point of view (i.e., identified aspectsincreasing acceptance and adoption by users of the system). |
Stollnberger, Gerald; Moser, Christiane; Zenz, Cornelia; Tscheligi, Manfred; Szczesniak-Stanczyk, Dorota; Janowski, Marcin; Brzozowski, Wojciech; Wysokinski, Andrzej Capturing Expected User Experience of Robotic Systems in the Health Care Sector Inproceedings Proceedings of the ARW2014, pp. 42–46, 2014. Abstract | BibTeX @inproceedings{Stollnberger2014b,
title = {Capturing Expected User Experience of Robotic Systems in the Health Care Sector},
author = {Gerald Stollnberger and Christiane Moser and Cornelia Zenz and Manfred Tscheligi and Dorota Szczesniak-Stanczyk and Marcin Janowski and Wojciech Brzozowski and Andrzej Wysokinski},
year = {2014},
date = {2014-01-01},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the ARW2014},
pages = {42--46},
abstract = {This paper reflects on capturing user experience of anticipated use (i.e., expected user experience) from users, as well as to investigate their design visions concerning robotic systems in the health care sector. The robotic system should be capable of performing remote examinations such as physical examination with palpation (pressing patient's stomach to identify pain regions and stiffness of organs) and ultrasonography. In order to raise the acceptance and trust in such systems, which is especially important in the health-care sector, a detailed user requirement analysis is inevitable. The applied robot toolkit approach, in combination with focus-groups, showed great potential of capturing expected user experience of systems at a very early stage of development, even without an actual working system. The results indicate implications on the system design, especially concerning issues related to trust, perceived safety, and social presence. Furthermore, a direction of how information should be provided to the patients.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
This paper reflects on capturing user experience of anticipated use (i.e., expected user experience) from users, as well as to investigate their design visions concerning robotic systems in the health care sector. The robotic system should be capable of performing remote examinations such as physical examination with palpation (pressing patient's stomach to identify pain regions and stiffness of organs) and ultrasonography. In order to raise the acceptance and trust in such systems, which is especially important in the health-care sector, a detailed user requirement analysis is inevitable. The applied robot toolkit approach, in combination with focus-groups, showed great potential of capturing expected user experience of systems at a very early stage of development, even without an actual working system. The results indicate implications on the system design, especially concerning issues related to trust, perceived safety, and social presence. Furthermore, a direction of how information should be provided to the patients. |