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SpokeSense

SpokeSense SpokeSense is an easy-to-install sensing solution intended for wheelchair basketball players. Our aim with SpokeSense is to provide support for both long-term and real-time analysis of performance information for wheelchair court sport athletes. We developed and tested SpokeSense in the context of wheelchair basketball. We extend prior work quantifying wheelchair court-sport activity by enabling real-time review of performance data and other important events as well as supporting long-term logging. Our secondary focus was on creating a means of tracking activity that would be accurate, safe to use, and practical. In this article, we discuss the design of our sensor to support practical use during wheelchair basketball activities, provide access to relevant accurate data, and support real-time and post-hoc review. We discuss the performance of our sensor and the initial interface to support data review. Finally, we discuss broader implications for the design of assistive technologies for physical activity. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png ACM SIGACCESS Accessibility and Computing Association for Computing Machinery

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Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 Copyright is held by the owner/author(s)
ISSN
1558-2337
eISSN
1558-1187
DOI
10.1145/3386308.3386310
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

SpokeSense is an easy-to-install sensing solution intended for wheelchair basketball players. Our aim with SpokeSense is to provide support for both long-term and real-time analysis of performance information for wheelchair court sport athletes. We developed and tested SpokeSense in the context of wheelchair basketball. We extend prior work quantifying wheelchair court-sport activity by enabling real-time review of performance data and other important events as well as supporting long-term logging. Our secondary focus was on creating a means of tracking activity that would be accurate, safe to use, and practical. In this article, we discuss the design of our sensor to support practical use during wheelchair basketball activities, provide access to relevant accurate data, and support real-time and post-hoc review. We discuss the performance of our sensor and the initial interface to support data review. Finally, we discuss broader implications for the design of assistive technologies for physical activity.

Journal

ACM SIGACCESS Accessibility and ComputingAssociation for Computing Machinery

Published: Mar 2, 2020

References