prediction process, another factor will be introduced
- a social-science based PAR approach will be used
to involve seniors, to empower them and to increase
their independence and control over the whole
process of engagement in the project's activities, as a
complementary protocol to the full compliance with
technical requirements.
What would be the added value of PAR, on top of
standard protocols of ensuring end- users
engagement?
- PAR’s main goal is to enable action. Action is
achieved through a reflective cycle, whereby
participants collect and analyze data, then determine
what action should follow.
- PAR’s approach pays careful attention to power
relationships, advocating for power to be deliberately
shared between the researcher and the researched:
blurring the line between them until the researched
become the researchers. The researched cease to be
objects and become partners in the whole research
process.
- unlike other static approaches, PAR does not
remove data and information from their contexts.
Most health research involves people, even if only as
passive participants, as “subjects” or “respondents”.
PAR advocates that those being researched should be
involved in the process actively. The degree to which
this is possible in health research will differ as will
the willingness of people to be involved in research
(Baum at al., 2006 , p. 854)
4 CONCLUSIONS
The recommendation for improving future practices
in the elicitation of seniors´ involvement in ICT-
based health solutions, based on the experiences of
ongoing and future projects in the field can be
summarized as follows. With aging population it is a
vital social and economic purpose to develop
complex and, sophisticated, yet easy to use and
reliable, ICT systems supporting wellbeing,
healthcare and interventions. It calls for sustainable
development: in order to make such systems useful
and productive there is a need for advancement in the
field of technology and a need for advancement in the
methods of involving active seniors in designing such
services. Both fields need to be balanced, but they
cannot be developed separately – there is a call for
synergetic and socially innovative approaches. One of
the ways to achieve that is to take multidisciplinary
approach and equally respect all the sciences:
medical, technical, social and humanities - to build
integrated systems supporting and empowering all
involved participants. The biggest challenge so far is
to successfully communicate between all the
disciplines, while designing, testing and developing
products and services, but without tackling it, the
profoundly integrated approaches will not be
achievable.
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Fourth International Conference on Telecommunications and Remote Sensing