Body map image coding to support wearable design for skin-to-skin contact

IF 0.8 4区 艺术学 0 ART Design Journal Pub Date : 2023-09-26 DOI:10.1080/14606925.2023.2257559
Crystal Compton, Abigail Clarke-Sather, Jessica L. Ridgway, Lindsay Naylor
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Abstract

AbstractPeople place tools on their bodies during daily activities that impact their health and safety. Mapping the locations of this equipment and evaluating the appropriateness of these locations can aid people to achieve their goals. This paper considers the location of equipment, life support systems such as ventilation tubing and intravenous lines, on the human body during kangaroo care in hospitals. Kangaroo care (KC) is skin-to-skin contact between infants and adult caregivers, which dramatically improves health outcomes for both. This research provides information useful for design to support safe KC in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). Assessment of 100 images from a Google Image search conducted on May 19, 2021, using the search text ‘NICU kangaroo care tubes’ was undertaken. An expert NICU nurse verified that tube location followed best practices. This method documents human-body-tool interaction for improved safety and functioning across contexts.Keywords: Body mappingimage analysisuser-centered designwearable designkangaroo care Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s). The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by M® Global under the Sustainable Development Goals Initiative Rapid Response Grants Program 2020. Notes on contributorsCrystal ComptonCrystal Compton is a Senior Mechanical (Soft Systems/Textile) Engineer at Flex. She received her PhD from the University of Minnesota – Twin Cities focusing on Wearable Technology, E-textiles, and Human Factors and Ergonomics.Abigail Clarke-SatherAbigail Clarke-Sather (she/her) is an Associate Professor Mechanical & Industrial Engineering department at the University of Minnesota Duluth. Dr. Clarke-Sather welcomes collaborations on real-world applications in smart wearables, engineering sustainable development, sustainability life cycle assessment and textile recycling through her research lab, the Applied Sustainable Product Innovation and Resilient Engineering (ASPIRE) Lab.Jessica L. RidgwayJessica L. Ridgway is an associate professor at Florida State University, in the Retail Entrepreneurship program in the Jim Moran College of Entrepreneurship. Her research interests include designing with technology, creative/textile print design, and functional designs for NICU environments and breastfeeding.Lindsay NaylorLindsay Naylor (she/her) is Associate Professor in the Department of Geography & Spatial Sciences at the University of Delaware in the United States and is the co-facilitator of the Embodiment Lab. She works on the multi-sited ‘geo’ of geopolitics and examines how it is written across space, place, and bodies. She draws from frameworks in feminist geopolitics, decolonial philosophy, and diverse economies to ground action-oriented research. Dr. Naylor publishes on fair trade among other food and agriculture related topics and she is the author of the award winning book Fair Trade Rebels: Coffee Production and Struggles for Autonomy in Chiapas.
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身体地图图像编码,支持皮肤接触的可穿戴设计
摘要人们在日常活动中使用的工具会影响他们的健康和安全。绘制这些设备的位置并评估这些位置的适当性可以帮助人们实现他们的目标。本文考虑了医院袋鼠式护理中设备、生命支持系统(如通气管和静脉注射管)在人体上的位置。袋鼠式护理(KC)是婴儿和成人看护人之间的肌肤接触,它极大地改善了双方的健康状况。本研究为支持新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)安全KC的设计提供了有用的信息。对2021年5月19日进行的谷歌图像搜索中的100张图像进行评估,搜索文本为“NICU袋鼠护理管”。一位新生儿重症监护室的专家护士证实,管子的位置遵循了最佳做法。该方法记录了人体-工具的交互作用,以提高安全性和跨环境的功能。关键词:人体测绘图像分析以用户为中心设计可穿戴设计袋鼠护理披露声明作者未报告潜在利益冲突。支持本研究结果的数据可根据通讯作者的合理要求提供。本研究由M®Global在2020年可持续发展目标倡议快速反应资助计划下提供支持。crystal Compton是Flex的高级机械(软系统/纺织)工程师。她在明尼苏达大学双城分校获得博士学位,专注于可穿戴技术,电子纺织品,人类因素和人体工程学。Abigail Clarke-Sather(她/她)是明尼苏达大学德卢斯分校机械与工业工程系副教授。Clarke-Sather博士欢迎通过她的研究实验室——应用可持续产品创新和弹性工程(ASPIRE)实验室,在智能可穿戴设备、工程可持续发展、可持续生命周期评估和纺织品回收等实际应用领域开展合作。Jessica L. Ridgway是佛罗里达州立大学吉姆莫兰创业学院零售创业项目的副教授。她的研究兴趣包括技术设计,创意/纺织品印花设计,以及新生儿重症监护病房环境和母乳喂养的功能设计。Lindsay Naylor(她/她)是美国特拉华大学地理与空间科学系的副教授,也是Embodiment Lab的共同主持者。她研究地缘政治的多地点“地理”,并研究它是如何在空间、地点和身体上书写的。她从女权主义地缘政治、去殖民主义哲学和多样化经济的框架中汲取灵感,开展以行动为导向的研究。Naylor博士在其他食品和农业相关主题中发表了公平贸易,她是获奖书籍《公平贸易叛军:恰帕斯州的咖啡生产和自治斗争》的作者。
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