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All Outputs (15)

Examining the Use of Autonomous Systems for Home Health Support Using a Smart Mirror (2023)
Journal Article
Dowthwaite, L., Reyes Cruz, G., Pena, A. R., Pepper, C., Jäger, N., Barnard, P., …Benford, S. (2023). Examining the Use of Autonomous Systems for Home Health Support Using a Smart Mirror. Healthcare, 11(19), Article 2608. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11192608

The home is becoming a key location for healthcare delivery, including the use of technology driven by autonomous systems (AS) to monitor and support healthcare plans. Using the example of a smart mirror, this paper describes the outcomes of focus gr... Read More about Examining the Use of Autonomous Systems for Home Health Support Using a Smart Mirror.

Examining the Use of Autonomous Systems for Home Health Support using a Smart Mirror (2023)
Working Paper
Dowthwaite, L., Reyez Cruz, G., Pena, A. R., Pepper, C., Jäger, N., Barnard, P., …Benford, S. Examining the Use of Autonomous Systems for Home Health Support using a Smart Mirror

The home is becoming a key location for healthcare delivery, including the use of technology driven by autonomous systems (AS) to monitor and support healthcare plans. Using the example of a smart mirror, this paper describes the outcomes of focus gr... Read More about Examining the Use of Autonomous Systems for Home Health Support using a Smart Mirror.

Reflections on RRI in “TAS for Health at Home” (2022)
Journal Article
Jäger, N., Dowthwaite, L., Barnard, P., Hughes, A., das Nair, R., Crepaz-Keay, D., …Benford, S. (2022). Reflections on RRI in “TAS for Health at Home”. Journal of Responsible Technology, 12, Article 100049. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrt.2022.100049

We reflect on our experiences using Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI) in the project “TAS for Health at Home”. Driven by a multi-disciplinary research team that consisted of experts in mental health, stroke rehabilitation, management of multi... Read More about Reflections on RRI in “TAS for Health at Home”.

Disabled-by-design: effects of inaccessible urban public spaces on users of mobility assistive devices–a systematic review (2022)
Journal Article
Kapsalis, E., Jaeger, N., & Hale, J. (2024). Disabled-by-design: effects of inaccessible urban public spaces on users of mobility assistive devices–a systematic review. Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology, 19(3), 604-622. https://doi.org/10.1080/17483107.2022.2111723

Purpose Despite the increase of users of Mobility Assistive Devices (MobAD), there has been a lack of accessibility in urban environments in many parts of the world. We present a systematic review of how the inaccessible design of public spaces affe... Read More about Disabled-by-design: effects of inaccessible urban public spaces on users of mobility assistive devices–a systematic review.

Room to breathe: Using adaptive architecture to examine the relationship between alexithymia and interoception (2021)
Journal Article
Abdulhamid, H., Jäger, N., Schnädelbach, H., & Smith, A. D. (2022). Room to breathe: Using adaptive architecture to examine the relationship between alexithymia and interoception. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 153, Article 110708. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychores.2021.110708

Objective: Individuals with alexithymia experience difficulties interpreting emotional states in self and others, which has been associated with interoceptive impairment. Current theories are primarily based on subjective and conscious measures of in... Read More about Room to breathe: Using adaptive architecture to examine the relationship between alexithymia and interoception.

Relational architectures and wearable space: Smart schools and the politics of ubiquitous sensation (2019)
Journal Article
de Freitas, E., Rousell, D., & Jäger, N. (2020). Relational architectures and wearable space: Smart schools and the politics of ubiquitous sensation. Research in Education, 107(1), 10-32. https://doi.org/10.1177/0034523719883667

This paper undertakes an analysis of the "smart school" as a building that both senses and manages bodies through sensory data. The authors argue that smart schools produce a situation of ubiquitous sensation in which learning environments are contin... Read More about Relational architectures and wearable space: Smart schools and the politics of ubiquitous sensation.

The Performative Mirror Space (2019)
Conference Proceeding
Jacobs, R., Schnadelbach, H., Jaeger, N., Leal, S., Shackford, R., Benford, S., & Patel, R. (2019). The Performative Mirror Space. In CHI '19: Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (1–14). https://doi.org/10.1145/3290605.3300630

Interactive mirrors, typically combining semi-transparent mirrors, digital screens and interaction mechanisms have been developed for a variety of application areas. Drawing on existing techniques to create interactive mirror spaces, we investigated... Read More about The Performative Mirror Space.

WABI: Facilitating Synchrony Between Inhabitants of Adaptive Architecture (2019)
Book Chapter
Jäger, N., Schnädelbach, H., Hale, J., Kirk, D., & Glover, K. (2019). WABI: Facilitating Synchrony Between Inhabitants of Adaptive Architecture. In People, Personal Data and the Built Environment (41-75). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-70875-1_3

We spend most of our lives in buildings where we interact with people that occupy the same space. A common and intuitive form of interaction with others is to synchronise our own behaviour with theirs, and such interpersonal synchrony can have variou... Read More about WABI: Facilitating Synchrony Between Inhabitants of Adaptive Architecture.

Adaptive Architecture and Personal Data (2019)
Journal Article
Schnädelbach, H., Jäger, N., & Urquhart, L. (2019). Adaptive Architecture and Personal Data. ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction, 26(2), 1-31. https://doi.org/10.1145/3301426

Via sensors carried by people and sensors embedded in the environment, personal data is being processed to try to understand activity patterns and people{\textquoteright}s internal states in the context of human-building interaction. This data is use... Read More about Adaptive Architecture and Personal Data.

Adaptive Architecture: regulating human building interaction (2019)
Journal Article
Urquhart, L., Schnädelbach, H., & Jäger, N. (2019). Adaptive Architecture: regulating human building interaction. International Review of Law, Computers and Technology, 33(1), 3-33. https://doi.org/10.1080/13600869.2019.1562605

In this paper, we explore the regulatory, technical and interactional implications of Adaptive Architecture (AA) and how it will recalibrate the nature of human-building interaction. We comprehensively unpack the emergence and history of this novel c... Read More about Adaptive Architecture: regulating human building interaction.

Living with Adaptive Architecture (2018)
Exhibition / Performance
Living with Adaptive Architecture. [prototypes, models, film]. 12 May 2018 - 17 June 2018. (Unpublished)

The large-scale introduction of computing technologies into buildings has made architecture adaptive to its environment and its inhabitants. Systems of sensors, actuators and software have changed the way we live in such buildings, how we interact wi... Read More about Living with Adaptive Architecture.

Interacting with adaptive architecture (2017)
Journal Article
Jäger, N. (2017). Interacting with adaptive architecture. Interactions (ACM publication), 24(6), 62-65. https://doi.org/10.1145/3137113

The design and fabrication of adaptive architecture are often driven by technological possibilities, such as employing the latest construction materials and processes, the newest sensors, better actuators, or novel data- processing capabilities. Less... Read More about Interacting with adaptive architecture.

Enacted Embodiment in Adaptive Architecture: Physiological Interactions Between Inhabitants and Biofeedback Architecture (2015)
Thesis
Jaeger, N. Enacted Embodiment in Adaptive Architecture: Physiological Interactions Between Inhabitants and Biofeedback Architecture. (Thesis). University of Nottingham. Retrieved from https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/4381761

This thesis argues for an enactive embodied approach to understanding interactions with Adaptive Architecture. The growing interest in Ubiquitous and Pervasive Computing, including the current trends of wearable, sensor infused technology, shows the... Read More about Enacted Embodiment in Adaptive Architecture: Physiological Interactions Between Inhabitants and Biofeedback Architecture.

Real-time Bodily Interactions with Adaptive Architecture (2014)
Presentation / Conference
Jaeger, N., & Hale, J. (2014, April). Real-time Bodily Interactions with Adaptive Architecture. Paper presented at CHI 2014, Toronto, ON

We introduce the concept of inter-bodily resonance to the field of Adaptive Architecture. This is a model of real-time bodily interaction we believe offers many opportunities for both designing and understanding user experience and interactions of ne... Read More about Real-time Bodily Interactions with Adaptive Architecture.

Using adaptive architecture to probe attitudes towards ubiquitous monitoring (2013)
Conference Proceeding
Moran, S., Jaeger, N., Schnadelbach, H., & Glover, K. (2013). Using adaptive architecture to probe attitudes towards ubiquitous monitoring. https://doi.org/10.1109/istas.2013.6613100

The term Ubiquitous Monitoring aims to capture the unprecedented degree to which data collection will occur in the future through ongoing developments in embedded, wireless and sensory technologies. Intelligent buildings represent the most current in... Read More about Using adaptive architecture to probe attitudes towards ubiquitous monitoring.