2008
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-540-70540-6_151
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A Living Lab for Ambient Assisted Living in the Municipality of Schwechat

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Cited by 13 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Acceptance of ICT: Panek and Zagler (2008) report that the user needs are usually illunderstood during the processes of R&D and implementation, and according to S. Lauriks et al (2007) and Steve Lauriks et al (2010), there are several unmet needs (general and personalised information; support with regarding symptoms of dementia; socialisation; health monitoring and perceived safety). Users' cultural differences and backgrounds play a significant role in the acceptance of ICT (Duquenoy and Whitehouse, 2006).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Acceptance of ICT: Panek and Zagler (2008) report that the user needs are usually illunderstood during the processes of R&D and implementation, and according to S. Lauriks et al (2007) and Steve Lauriks et al (2010), there are several unmet needs (general and personalised information; support with regarding symptoms of dementia; socialisation; health monitoring and perceived safety). Users' cultural differences and backgrounds play a significant role in the acceptance of ICT (Duquenoy and Whitehouse, 2006).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although it is not an exhaustive list, Table 1 provides a number of examples to highlight the diverse nature and understanding of Living Labs along seven dimensions: (1) definitions, (2) interpretation, (3) types of Living Labs, (4) stakeholders involved in Living Labs, (5) disciplines and concepts covering Living Lab research, (6) context of Living Labs, (7) perspective and level of analysis to examine the phenomena. [45], assisted living [46], health care [47][48][49], media [50], agriculture [51], mobility [52,53], urban and rural areas, smart cities and digital cities, buildings [4,54,55] Perspective and Level of Analysis…”
Section: Living Labs Research Landscapementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such results have the potential to inform practitioners and managers in diverse fields. Among them, studies extensively discuss the application of Living Labs to a variety of contexts, including but not limited to ICT [45], assisted living [46], health care [47][48][49], media [50], agriculture [51], mobility [52,53], urban and rural areas, smart cities and digital cities, as well as buildings [4,54,55].…”
Section: Managerial Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After its application, the trends of the senior population were analyzed, which proved to be very useful in the detection of suspicious deviations, which is also important for the measurement of the prototype. The consequences of using the data in the wrong way are concerned, but after a few bursts, users have come to accept the technology without such concern, says P. Panek et al 20 .…”
Section: Performance Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 99%