WEIYU . H
Journey Mapping
Empathy Mapping
Concept Development
Prototyping
TIMELINE
Dec 2019 - Jan 2020
53.8% of elderly living alone feel lonely (25.1% always, 28.7% occasionally), often leading to anxiety and self-isolation.
ACCIDENT RISKS
41.2% of incidents go unnoticed. Major causes: falls (27.3%), sudden illness (12.4%), fire (1.5%).
CURRENT SOLUTIONS INADEQUATE
- Nannies → costly, inconsistent quality.
- Community centers → limited staff, not real-time.
- Alarm devices → difficult in emergencies, cannot predict risks.
Emotional trajectory moves from Mild → Afraid → Weary → Irritable → Self-denial → Lonely, showing a progressive decline across the day.
KEY ISSUES
Health & safety risks, lack of medical support, social indifference, emotional loneliness.
Based on importance and feasibility evaluation, and guided by Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, the study ultimately focused on three specific design directions:
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Safety
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Social connection
- Basic physiological support
Unlike traditional fall-detection devices that only react after an accident, this smart slipper provides early warnings of potential risks, preventing danger before it happens while still offering emergency alerts as backup.
PREVENTION BEFORE ACCIDENT
Detects water, obstacles, or slippery floors in advance, reminding the elderly before they fall.
REAL - TIME FEEDBACK
Provides vibration and light alerts directly through the slipper, ensuring immediate awareness.
EMERGENCY BACKUP
If an accident still occurs, the system automatically alerts community or ambulance centers.
DUAL PROTECTION
Combines proactive risk prevention with post-accident rescue, offering comprehensive safety.
PREVENTION BEFORE ACCIDENT
Detects water, obstacles, or slippery floors in advance, reminding the elderly before they fall.
REAL - TIME FEEDBACK
Provides vibration and light alerts directly through the slipper, ensuring immediate awareness.
EMERGENCY BACKUP
If an accident still occurs, the system automatically alerts community or ambulance centers.
DUAL PROTECTION
Combines proactive risk prevention with post-accident rescue, offering comprehensive safety.
Some older adults may perceive smart devices as surveillance or unnecessary trouble, leading to reluctance or refusal to use them consistently.
USAGE BLIND SPOT
Monitoring only works when the shoes are worn, creating blind spots when the elderly are barefoot, lying down, or active at night.
COMMUNITY INTEGRATION
Linking alarms to community or medical institutions requires strong partnerships, but resources vary across regions, making cooperation difficult to standardize.
PRIVACY CONCERNS
Health data collection and sharing may raise worries about personal privacy being compromised, reducing willingness to adopt the system.
PHYSIOLOGICAL FACTORS
Reduced sensory perception and slower response may cause older users to miss or ignore subtle vibration or light alerts.
BEHAVIORAL HABITS
Forgetting to charge the device, reluctance to maintain it, or taking shoes off when inconvenient can disrupt continuous monitoring.
NEXT PROJECT