Conceitos Básicos
Older adults exhibit varying performance in glanceable data visualizations, with age impacting time thresholds and preferences.
Resumo
The study replicates a perceptual experiment on smartwatch visualizations with older adults aged 65 and above. It explores the impact of aging on perception, cognition, and decision-making related to data visualization. The research aims to establish empirical thresholds for older adults in interpreting glanceable visualizations and highlights the influence of age on graphical perception. The findings suggest that Donut charts are preferred by older adults, followed by Bar charts, while Radial charts show the slowest performance. Performance declines as data complexity increases, especially for Radial charts. The study also compares performance between younger and older adults, as well as between young-old (65-74) and old-old (75+) participants.
INTRODUCTION
- Glanceable visualizations enable quick insight discovery.
- Older adult population is rising globally.
- Smartwatches pose challenges due to small fonts.
- Aging affects perception and cognition.
STUDY DESIGN AND EXECUTION
- Replication study on smartwatch visualizations with older adults.
- Participants aged 65+ recruited from local community groups.
- Sony SmartWatch 3 used for stimuli presentation.
- Two-alternative forced choice approach employed.
DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS
Time Thresholds:
- Older adults perform best with Donut charts.
- Performance gap widens for Radial charts.
Accuracy:
- Both young-old and old-old participants meet or exceed expected accuracy levels.
Strategies:
- Participants use various strategies based on chart types (Bar, Donut, Radial).
Preference and Confidence Ratings:
- Older adults prefer Donut charts over Bar and Radial.
Estatísticas
Smartwatches pose challenges due to small fonts.
Citações
"Age-related farsightedness is nearly ubiquitous in adults 65 years and older."
"Our findings demonstrate that age matters in graphical perception."