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All Outputs (57)

Version reporting of wearables in clinical trials v1 (2024)
Digital Artefact
Ahmad Khattak, K., Woolley, S., & Collins, T. (2024). Version reporting of wearables in clinical trials v1. [protocol]

This study involved the extraction and analysis of version reporting information from completed and reported ClinicalTrials.gov entries for wrist-worn wearable intervention studies.

“Should I Throw Away My Old iPad?” - Reconsidering Usefulness in Obsolete Devices (2024)
Conference Proceeding
Goodwin, C., & Woolley, S. (2024). “Should I Throw Away My Old iPad?” - Reconsidering Usefulness in Obsolete Devices. In Design for Equality and Justice (332-339). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-61688-4_32

Device obsolescence contributes to the rising levels of annual e-waste. The research presented in this extended workshop paper summarises the findings of two studies conducted in 2021 and 2022 that highlighted the difficulties faced by consumers in d... Read More about “Should I Throw Away My Old iPad?” - Reconsidering Usefulness in Obsolete Devices.

Barriers to device longevity and reuse: A vintage device empirical study (2024)
Journal Article
Goodwin, C., & Woolley, S. (2024). Barriers to device longevity and reuse: A vintage device empirical study. Journal of Systems and Software, 211, Article 111991. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2024.111991

This extended paper contributes a methodology and a detailed analysis of app installation and functionality on a ‘vintage’ device. Experimental results are presented that demonstrate barriers to the reuse of vintage Apple devices, and solutions are p... Read More about Barriers to device longevity and reuse: A vintage device empirical study.

Virtual and Augmented Reality Interfaces for 3D Mesopotamian Environments and Artefacts – A Survey (2023)
Conference Proceeding
Rhodes, R., & Woolley, S. (2023). Virtual and Augmented Reality Interfaces for 3D Mesopotamian Environments and Artefacts – A Survey. . https://doi.org/10.14236/ewic/BCSHCI2023.8

This paper surveys twenty years of published works and implementations of virtual reality (VR), augmented
reality (AR) and 3D repositories relevant to ancient Mesopotamia. Results are sorted according to type,
relevance to cuneiform, evaluation, an... Read More about Virtual and Augmented Reality Interfaces for 3D Mesopotamian Environments and Artefacts – A Survey.

Quantifying Device Usefulness - How Useful is an Obsolete Device? (2023)
Conference Proceeding
Goodwin, C., Woolley, S., de Quincey, E., & Collins, T. (2023). Quantifying Device Usefulness - How Useful is an Obsolete Device?. In Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2023 (90-99). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-42293-5_8

Obsolete devices add to the rising levels of electronic waste, a major environmental concern, and a contributing factor to climate change. In recent years, device manufacturers have established environmental commitments and launched initiatives such... Read More about Quantifying Device Usefulness - How Useful is an Obsolete Device?.

Connected Virtual Experiences for Small and Less Visible Museum Artefacts (2022)
Conference Proceeding
Rhodes, R., & Woolley, S. (2022). Connected Virtual Experiences for Small and Less Visible Museum Artefacts. . https://doi.org/10.14236/ewic/hci2022.60

This paper summarises a programme of research motivated by the challenge of achieving engaging 3D virtual experiences for small heritage artefacts, the sorts of artefacts that mare difficult to display and may be easily overlooked in museum settings.... Read More about Connected Virtual Experiences for Small and Less Visible Museum Artefacts.

Barriers to Device Longevity and Reuse: An Analysis of Application Download, Installation and Functionality on a Vintage Device (2022)
Conference Proceeding
Goodwin, C., & Woolley, S. (2022). Barriers to Device Longevity and Reuse: An Analysis of Application Download, Installation and Functionality on a Vintage Device. . https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-08129-3_9

This paper contributes a methodology and analysis of application installation and function on a ‘vintage’ device. Attempts were made to download, install, open, and run 230 apps on an Apple iPad Mini tablet of approximately nine years old. The apps c... Read More about Barriers to Device Longevity and Reuse: An Analysis of Application Download, Installation and Functionality on a Vintage Device.

Evaluating the clinical decision making of physiotherapists in the assessment and management of paediatric shoulder instability (2021)
Journal Article
Philp, F., Faux-Nightingale, A., Woolley, S., de Quincey, E., & Pandyan, A. (2022). Evaluating the clinical decision making of physiotherapists in the assessment and management of paediatric shoulder instability. Physiotherapy (de Gruyter), 115, 46-57. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physio.2021.12.330

Objective To elicit what information and clinical decision-making processes physiotherapists use in the assessment and management of paediatric shoulder instability.

Design Qualitative study. A modified nominal focus group technique, involving thr... Read More about Evaluating the clinical decision making of physiotherapists in the assessment and management of paediatric shoulder instability.

Compounding barriers to fairness in the digital technology ecosystem (2021)
Conference Proceeding
Woolley, S. I., Collins, T., Andras, P., Gardner, A., Ortolani, M., & Pitt, J. (2021). Compounding barriers to fairness in the digital technology ecosystem. . https://doi.org/10.1109/ISTAS52410.2021.9629166

A growing sense of unfairness permeates our quasi-digital society. Despite drivers supporting and motivating ethical practice in the digital technology ecosystem, there are compounding barriers to fairness that, at every level, impact technology inno... Read More about Compounding barriers to fairness in the digital technology ecosystem.

A Review of Wearable Multi-wavelength Photoplethysmography (2021)
Journal Article
Ray, D., Collins, T., Woolley, S., & Ponnapalli, P. (2023). A Review of Wearable Multi-wavelength Photoplethysmography. IEEE Reviews in Biomedical Engineering, 16, 136-151. https://doi.org/10.1109/RBME.2021.3121476

Optical pulse detection photoplethysmography (PPG) provides a means of low cost and unobtrusive physiological monitoring that is popular in many wearable devices. However, the accuracy, robustness and generalizability of single-wavelength PPG sensing... Read More about A Review of Wearable Multi-wavelength Photoplethysmography.