Table of Contents
Part 1: Understanding People.- Chapter 1: Understanding Real
People: Going Beyond Single Severe Capability Loss.- Chapter 2:
Inclusivity Requirements for Immersive Content Consumption in
Virtual and Augmented Reality.- Chapter 3: Low-Carbon to Older
Chinese Migrants: Theoretical Models.- Part 2: Designing for an
Ageing Population.- Chapter 4: Engagement Towards Creating New
Models for Later Life Living.- Chapter 5: Promoting Physical
Activity to Older Adults Using Different Ageing Models.- Chapter 6:
The Effect of Socio-Cultural Determinants on Designing Inclusive
Telemedicine Tools for the Aging Population.- Chapter 7: Proposing
a Systematic Assessment Tool for Evaluating the Architectural
Variables of Dementia-friendly Design in Nursing Homes.- Part 3:
Inclusive Built Environments.- Chapter 8: Reframing Independent
Living: Co-producing Homes to Age-in-place.
About the Author
Joy Goodman-Deane is a Senior Research Associate in the
Inclusive Design group at the EDC. She gained a Ph.D. in Computing
Science from Glasgow University in 2002 and worked as Research
Associate there investigating the design of computer-based
technology for older people. For the last 18 years, she has worked
at the Engineering Design Centre (EDC) at the University of
Cambridge where her research has focused on inclusive design. Her
interests focus on developing tools and methods to help support
designers in putting inclusive design into practice. Joy helped to
develop and author the Inclusive Design Toolkit as well as tools
such as the Exclusion Calculator, Cambridge impairment simulators,
and digital personas.
Hua Dong is a Professor in Design at Brunel University London. Her
Ph.D. research at the Department of Engineering, University of
Cambridge, has laid the foundation of her research expertise in
inclusive design. Hua shares her passion and expertise through
keynote speeches at international conferences, initiating new
courses and research programs, and academic and popular
publications. She has edited 6 books on the topics of inclusive
design, assistive technology and universal access and
authored/co-authored 200+ papers. Hua has extensive
experience in providing specialized research consultancy to
industries in the UK, Finland, and China to help designers adopt a
more inclusive approach and support companies to implement
inclusive practices. Hua was elected Fellow of the Design Research
Society in 2019; she received the award of ‘Engineering Heroes’—the
Top 50 Women in Engineering 2021 from Women’s Engineering Society
in 2021. Hua had been Professor at Tongji University and
Loughborough University before joining Brunel University London as
Inaugural Dean of Brunel Design School.
Ann Heylighen is a Design Researcher with a background in
architectural engineering. She is currently Professor of design
studies andFrancqui Research Professor in the Department of
Architecture at KU Leuven (University of Leuven), where she
co-chairs the Research[x]Design group. Her main research interests
are situated at the interface of architectural design and social
sciences/humanities. She is particularly interested in how insight
into human diversity may expand prevailing ways of understanding
and designing space. Ann was awarded several research grants,
including a Starting Grant and Proof-of-Concept Grant of the
European Research Council. She is Fellow of the Design Research
Society, Associate Editor of Design Studies and Member of the
editorial board of CoDesign and of Building Research and
Information. Ann studied architectural engineering at KU Leuven and
ETH Zürich. After completing her Ph.D. at KU Leuven, she conducted
postdoctoral research at Harvard University and the University of
California, Berkeley, and she was Visiting Professor at
Sapienza—University of Rome.
Jonathan Lazar, Ph.D., LLM is a Professor in the College of
Information Studies (iSchool) at the University of Maryland.
Professor Lazar has authored or edited 14 books, including
Accessible Technology and the Developing World (co-edited with
Michael Stein), Research Methods in Human-Computer Interaction (2nd
edition, co-authored with Heidi Feng and Harry Hochheiser),
Ensuring Digital Accessibility Through Process and Policy
(co-authored with Dan Goldstein and Anne Taylor), Disability, Human
Rights, and Information Technology (co-edited with Michael Stein),
Universal Usability: Designing Computer Interfaces for Diverse User
Populations, and Web Usability: A User-Centered Design Approach.
Professor Lazar has published over 150 refereed articles in
journals, conference proceedings, and edited books, frequently
serves as Adviser to U.S. government agencies, regularly provides
testimony at the federal and state levels, and multiple U.S.
federal regulations cite his research. At the University of
Maryland iSchool, he teaches courses on human–computer interaction,
user-centered design, accessibility, and legal research methods. He
is Recipient of the 2021 ACM SIGCHI Academy Award, the 2020 ACM
SIGACCESS Award for Outstanding Contributions to Computing and
Accessibility, the 2017 University System of Maryland Board of
Regents Faculty Award for Excellence in Research, and the 2016 ACM
SIGCHI Social Impact Award. Dr. Lazar recently served as General
Chair of the ACM ASSETS 2021 conference. At the University of
Maryland, Dr. Lazar is Faculty Member in the Human-Computer
Interaction Lab (HCIL) and serves as Director of the Trace Research
and Development Center, one of the world's oldest research centers
on technology and disability.
John Clarkson is a Professor in the Department of Engineering at
the University of Cambridge and in the Faculty of Industrial Design
Engineering at Delft University of Technology. He is Director of
the Cambridge Engineering Design Centre and Co-Director of
Cambridge Public Health. His research interests include process
management, change management, healthcare design, inclusive design,
and automotive design. As well as publishing over 800 papers, he
has written and edited a number of books on medical equipment
design, inclusive design, and process management. John is Fellow of
the Royal Academy of Engineering and the Royal Swedish Academy of
Engineering Sciences. He was elected Fellow of the Design Society
in 2021 and awarded the Sir Misha Black Medal in 2018 for services
to Design Education.