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Main Authors: Badmos, Fatima, Murphy, Emma, Ward, Michael, Berry, Damon
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.20659
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author Badmos, Fatima
Murphy, Emma
Ward, Michael
Berry, Damon
author_facet Badmos, Fatima
Murphy, Emma
Ward, Michael
Berry, Damon
contents Existing research and physical activity guidelines highlight the benefits of outdoor physical activities for ageing populations. There is potential for technology to facilitate outdoor activity through Physical Web infrastructure. We proposed that embedding Physical Web applications that are engaging and interactive in public open spaces as part of interactive wellness parks can encourage older adults to participate in physical activities outdoors and motivate rehabilitation. We have created an initial design prototype based on design requirements generated from a qualitative field study with 24 older adults to explore their perceptions, experiences, and routines of outdoor physical activities. In this paper, we present an initial prototype and findings from a co-design session with 12 older adults, eliciting their feedback on the design and their ideas for future design iterations.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_20659
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Iteration and Co-design of a Physical Web Application for Outdoor Activities with Older Adults
Badmos, Fatima
Murphy, Emma
Ward, Michael
Berry, Damon
Human-Computer Interaction
Existing research and physical activity guidelines highlight the benefits of outdoor physical activities for ageing populations. There is potential for technology to facilitate outdoor activity through Physical Web infrastructure. We proposed that embedding Physical Web applications that are engaging and interactive in public open spaces as part of interactive wellness parks can encourage older adults to participate in physical activities outdoors and motivate rehabilitation. We have created an initial design prototype based on design requirements generated from a qualitative field study with 24 older adults to explore their perceptions, experiences, and routines of outdoor physical activities. In this paper, we present an initial prototype and findings from a co-design session with 12 older adults, eliciting their feedback on the design and their ideas for future design iterations.
title Iteration and Co-design of a Physical Web Application for Outdoor Activities with Older Adults
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.20659