| Everyday activities |
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| General activities |
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| Voluntary work |
| “(17) Yes, I am a counsellor at the children’s and young people’s helpline ‘Nummer gegen Kummer.’ That is supposed to be nine hours a month in shifts of two or three hours, so that is almost every week, and then I am also a reading mentor at school.”—DE_05 |
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| Church |
| “(81) I have already done a golden wedding. As I said, when I go to church for such an online service, I have also taken over prayers and readings (…)”—DE_01 |
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| Morning activities |
| “(13) Getting up, I always do a bit of gymnastics in the morning and have breakfast and then I walk the dog. I usually check my emails briefly beforehand to see if there’s anything important or whatever. Sometimes I answer them on my tablet while I’m in bed or something, but nobody knows that.”—DE_04 |
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| Hobbies |
| “(23) We are both very active when it comes to art exhibitions and like to go somewhere, so, I don’t know, to Documenta or, or to Münster or, we are both very interested in art.”—DE_04 |
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| Social activities |
| “(13) So, I am, yes, as I said, married, am present in a network of about 20, 30 friends, some of them eternal friends since childhood. (…) There were still eight friends from my studies, who are now still working like I was (…) and are now retired, with whom we now regularly engage in, for example, electronics tinkering.”—DE_07 |
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| Household |
| “(5) In any case, it can easily happen that I sit in my chair for half an hour or three quarters of an hour, and then I do whatever household chores are left over.”—DE_03 |
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| Sport |
| “(5) We went hiking a lot and also regularly did something for our health, that is, meditated for two hours in the morning, did gymnastics, then we often went walking, up the [specifically named mountain] here.”—DE_08 |
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| Family |
| “(11) One day I have my little grandson from eight, half past eight, who keeps me on my toes there, for one day”—DE_05 |
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| During the week |
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| “(13) Because during the week, they are people of the same age or older, at least no longer working, and with the younger relatives in particular, they meet at the weekend.”—DE_06 |
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| Weekend |
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| “(9) Yes, the weekend differs in that at the weekend, let’s say, the contacts with friends are of a different nature. That is, you usually do something, you have undertaken something longer and that is also a day trip”—DE_07 |
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| References |
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| Activity |
| “(15) Yes, on the other hand, perhaps the important aspect, which is perhaps also important in old age (…) is that in this respect, of course, one is also challenged by these own goals and, and thereby also remains mentally fit and active through these activities.”—DE_02 |
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| Structure |
| “(25) (…) So I need a daily structure. Those are the two things that I think I would miss if I didn’t have them.”—DE_08 |
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| Self-efficacy |
| “(291) And as I said earlier, the right to self-determination. Well, maybe it’s a bit of a tough subject or something, but you also have a right of self-determination to end your life or something, and that such a, such a, such a device could simply be a great hindrance to me, for example, I had that in the back of my mind when I said I don’t want to take my pills anymore, I don’t want to eat anymore or something, I’ve had enough.”—DE_04 |
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| Social relationships |
| “(19) Then I have a, yes, a number of very (thick?) friends above all and because of the commitment in the district senior citizens’ council, on the board, I was a local councillor here in T. for many years, action alliance, in other words a great many contacts, which are extremely, extremely important for ME as healthy ageing (incomp.) is the topic in general.”—DE_05 |
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| Under COVID-19 |
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| Negative |
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| Social contacts restricted | “(19) I’m the one who always likes to invite guests, so that’s totally gone now.”—DE_04 |
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| Activities drop out | “(83) That’s certainly the fact that we’re too heavily regulated. Yes, I think that not being able to go to a café, for example, to meet people in the afternoon, or now also, quite specifically, we can no longer go shopping in a DIY store, that is forbidden to us at the moment, and that of course now in the time when you could plant in the garden or need fertiliser, that is of course absolutely stupid, then you get annoyed about it, yes. These are things like that, let’s say the requirements and restrictions, they are certainly greater and more frustrating than the fear of getting corona.”—DE_07 |
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| Voluntary activity can not be done | “(11) One thing that has changed is that I am no longer a reading mentor and the railway station mission is closed. I do go there regularly to look after things, but it’s just not busy any more, so I see that I’m mostly alone.”—DE_08 |
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| Positive |
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| More/new activities | “(23) Well, it’s become more work than before. It was more relaxed before, I’d say. So, controlling everything from home is a big challenge. Unfortunately, my colleagues from the association are not as tech-savvy as I am. That means that even a Zoom conference is (incomp.) rather (incomp.) challenging, yes.”—DE_07 |
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| More digital | “(93) The fact that Corona has now brought the digital forward quickly, that is a nice, good feature” – DE_01 |
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| No changes |
| “(13) For me, not so much. Because I’ve only been running them and doing the management, so to speak. And that’s what I’m still doing now. There is a little less work. It’s a bit more for the others, who are there on site and play counsellor and host, for them it’s more intense, so (they miss?) that a lot. For me it’s not a big problem.”—DE_08 |
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| Vaccination |
| “(41) One thing that was very frustrating, not only for us but also for all our acquaintances, is that the vaccination appointments could hardly be planned. So we (incomp.) friends were busy for days, hours, half nights (incomp.). It’s a bureaucratic monster. So that already creates frustration (incomp.). Well, it’s not only like that in our family, but I notice it in general. People can’t understand that, yes.”—DE_07 |
| Health |
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| Importance in everyday life |
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| Conscious confrontation |
| “(29) In addition, there are regular, let’s say, eye doctor visits, or, or I don’t know what, urologist visits every two years, recently I also had a dermatologist examination, but I have also already, but it was two years ago, had a colonoscopy, so (.) I do preventive behaviour and not only when the (.) problems arise.”—DE_02 |
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| No conscious confrontation |
| “(61) Yesterday, last night, I had an interview with a composer who was very, very ill. He said that the moment you start to think about your health, you are already a bit ill. So (laughs) maybe a bit exaggerated, but I think I belong more in that direction.”—DE_05 |
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| Worries and fears |
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| “(53) So, it is so that in the (unv.) we have unfortunately had to determine that the eyesight is of course considerably diminishing and the danger of eye diseases is also great, so cataract now for example or macular degeneration is such a topic, with which I now also already had to deal. An operation will certainly be necessary at some point in the next few years.”—DE_07 |
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| References |
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| “(87) That I can move as long as possible”—DE_06 |
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| Information gathering |
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| Previous knowledge |
| “(51) Yes, I already have a bit of prior knowledge. I am a nurse and a lot of what I encounter there is familiar to me and I can already categorise it.”—DE_08 |
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| Social network |
| “(81) One of them has a professorship, a professorship for lung tumours, the other one is a pain therapist in private practice. That’s a pain therapist, then I have a daughter who is also a doctor. (laughs) And the rest I have here (…) corresponding doctors where I can go, ne.So, there’s something going on.”—DE_03 |
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| Medical institutions |
| “(35) Yes, sure. I, I, what I, what I take for example in the, in the pharmacy, when I have to do there or pick up any medication, there is also a small booklet, senior citizens’ guide and another booklet for diabetes patients, in addition to this pharmacy newspaper, and I read through it, but these are things that are now distributed through the health insurance system, which I can of course get there.”—DE_02 |
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| Internet |
| “(79) Yes, nowadays on the internet, of course. What if it twinges in the back? But then I know where it comes from. I often have tension in my shoulders or something. Now that I don’t work anymore, it’s not so extreme.Internet, actually.”—DE_06 |
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| Influence of COVID-19 |
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| “(75) So, it depends on how I answer now. In a general sense I say: No, I am the same as before. The whole truth is, of course, that we, both my wife and I, know that we are a risk group and that we stay away from everything and everyone, that we don’t show up anywhere without a mask. I’ve just been in the house, so in the, in the house hardly anyone comes in. Apart from the fitter, we don’t let anyone in. And in the car I always have two or three masks ready to hand as soon as I get out.”—DE_01 |
| Technologies in everyday life |
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| Attitude towards technologies/digitization |
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| Rather positive |
| “(59) I’m also someone who is HIGHLY interested in the developments in robotics in the care sector and in support in nursing homes or in care in general, so I’m, I’m totally open and I’m looking for the, for the positive opportunities and possibilities and, yes, opportunities and risks that almost everything, ne, has like that.”—DE_05 |
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| Rather negative/sceptical |
| “(131) Yes, it has two sides, I think. I think it makes a lot of things very convenient. What bothers me now, because I’ve studied it, is that you can no longer see through what actually happens with a swipe, with a click, with a tick somewhere on a form or something.”—DE_06 |
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| Specifically used devices |
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| Specific applications |
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| Email | “(17) I also write some mails, I also send some people letters by post and the like, where a response then comes accordingly by phone or by post”—DE_02 |
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| Other | “(191) This Komoot, I don’t know if you know it, I’ve been using it for a few years. (…) Sometimes also this Maps.me or Google Mapps for orientation.”—DE_08 |
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| Messenger | “(77) What increasingly plays a role in everyday life are messenger services like WhatsApp and now also Signal or Threema. They are nice to keep in touch, to send each other photos or little jokes. Yes. That’s basically our use of technology.”—DE_08 |
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| Smartphone |
| “(137) Well, the mobile phone is a very, very important instrument. That means I can be reached at any time if I want to.”—DE_08 |
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| Tablet |
| “(119) Well, back then, I’ve had it for eight years now, I think, I first bought a tablet and then a smartphone a little later. A smartphone is not really my thing, simply because we don’t have such great reception here.”—DE_04 |
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| Computer/laptop |
| “(117) (incomp.) so I have a Macintosh, I have a MacBook, I have several iPads, then Smart (incomp.), iPhones we have and here in the workplace there is currently a PC, so a Windows PC, there is a Linux computer standing around, (incomp.) and four monitors. Yes, so (incomp.) and a notebook, yes.”—DE_07 |
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| Household devices |
| “(117) I took over the mixer from my daughter, but of course I have a washing machine and a microwave and also (laughing) a hoover. Just what you need.”—DE_03 |
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| Conscious non-use |
| “(137) Otherwise (…) I don’t have a Facebook page, for example, so this, this closer social communication, it still doesn’t take place virtually for me.”—DE_08 |
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| Use scenarios |
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| Health-related |
| “(51) Then I have an Apple Watch, yes, with which I check my heart rate once a week, for example, or look at it, it’s like an ECG that’s built into it. Does it show any peculiarities or something”—DE_07 |
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| Everyday life |
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| Other | “(137) Also as a safety measure, no, so in the meantime I consciously take my mobile phone with me when I go out, when I go for a walk or hike, and I know that in an emergency I can use it to get help”—DE_08 |
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| Voluntary activity | “(55) So, let’s say, I also use the technical possibilities that seem to me to be necessary and useful for this other voluntary activity, and there are also virtual possibilities, especially for a fax, which is no longer used so often, that you can set up a virtual fax, have a corresponding fax number, from which you can send texts or similar or other things.”—DE_02 |
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| Hobbies | “(191) Yes (…), so there are, for hiking there are yes, there are apps where you can plan hikes or where you can also, where you can also orientate yourself.”—DE_08 |
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| Media | “(9) Read newspaper sometimes, now only on tablet”—DE_06 |
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| Social life |
| “(55) Yes, and now we actually do it more, so with the daughter/, so with the, I’ll just say daughter-in-law and the grandchildren it’s more over the phone and with the son-in-law and the family, there are also two children, here from time to time, what’s it called, Facetime or Zoom.”—DE_04 |
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| Advantages |
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| Videoconferencing |
| “(143) I think it’s great that there’s this video telephony, that you can be close to each other even in times like these, or my husband’s son, who once lived in America for seven years, we had more contact with him then than we do now that he lives in Germany again, because we don’t go there, but we skyped constantly or something. I think that’s great.”—DE_06 |
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| Makes things easier |
| “(107) Some of them live in a completely foreign world, so to make them understand, forget everything you know, look for it, do it as a hobby, tinker with it, with Linux, but the world works more simply.”—DE_07 |
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| Simplifies social contact |
| “(23) So, as far as communication is concerned, I can send a picture. Take a picture, send a picture, I have grandchildren, quite a few of them, and I communicate with them in this way, that I simply ask if you have time to come over, or they say I’ll come over then and there.It’s all so uncomplicated.”—DE_03 |
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| Supports |
| “(127) Yes, it’s very important for me because I have hearing aids and the hearing aids can be linked to the smartphone so that I can listen to lectures or something from the hearing aid or from the smartphone and hear the news or all kinds of things.”—DE_03 |
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| Disadvantages |
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| Being left behind |
| “(133) I’m curious to see how it works when I’m 20 years older, whether I’ll still be able to do it. So these are things that you are forced to do and those who can’t handle it will have a hard time and I find that worrying.”—DE_06 |
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| Useless functions |
| “(101) and you have to see what is nonsense with these smart home offers, i.e., whether the stereo system has to switch on when I enter the room, I doubt that”—DE_01 |
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| Barriers |
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| No need | “(143) Yes, that somehow seems too, I think, or, or it has always been like that somehow, that, that’s enough for me somehow. Then they have their television somehow, always watch only the first or second or whatever programme and (…) I think it’s just the power of habit, somehow, to want to adjust to something new, is not equally pronounced in all people, I think.To put it that way.”—DE_04 |
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| Costs | “(149) And we always have fun, because no matter when I come with a group, one of these electrical parts doesn’t WORK, ne. (laughs) Hm. So, yes. And if I then always need the handyman for everything because the roller shutter no longer goes up and down: can I afford this kind of support?”—DE_05 |
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| Large cooperations | “(161) The problem is that a certain company monopolises purchasing behaviour in this way. And I don’t like that because I don’t think monopolies are good and I see that the possibility of choice is lost.”—DE_08 |
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| Sense of surveillance | “(281) Well, I kind of have the feeling that it’s a bit like surveillance, too. Somehow, my movement profiles are being recorded”—DE_04. |
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| Data privacy | “(97) Yes, there was this uncertainty about whether it was safe. Online banking is about money and I wasn’t sure yet what possibilities there were for misuse, could my data be misused somewhere, I don’t know.Yes.”—DE_08 |
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| Lack of access | “(289) Yes, then of course that the internet connections have to get much better. Yes. If someone here in the house upgrades now, we have a music teacher here in the house who then did home schooling. The internet was constantly crashing. These lines are not big enough.”—DE_06 |
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| Fear of risks during use | “(25) And I have the impression that the (.) deepest reason is that I no longer dare, something comes out that I can’t do. That is the deepest reason. So, if you had someone who kept coming back, or I started relatively early with that, I’ve had a PC for a very long time, for many years. And when you start again, well. It’s somehow an inner anxiety, simply the feeling that you can’t do it anymore”—DE_03 |
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| Missing functions | “(65) What doesn’t work, I tried that with Siri, that doesn’t work at all, yes. Originally, I thought you could do something like that with a voice assistant. When you say, Siri, I have a headache, what could it be? Then you always don’t get the answers, not related to the question, yes.”—DE_07 |
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| Needs |
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| Show advantages | “(45) So it must, it must be recognised earlier the necessity and the meaningfulness and make clear which, which profit it can be”—DE_05 |
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| Gain trust/information | “(190) And then you can approach it in a very small way. For example, a lecture on what the internet can offer us makes no sense, yes. Instead, we should really say, let’s do a little research, and I’ll explain how a browser is structured. Here you can see in the browser that this is a secure data connection. What are our connections here and how do I create a bookmark for pages that I want to call up again and again. So very small-step and, as I said, a lot of time and no criticism of course, that’s also clear, but just say we’ll try it out now and then it’s good.”—DE_07 |
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| Personal support | “(29) Now he’s always there, so it was, so I, I’m not so incredibly skilled in such things, so I really need, and that’s a very important point, I need comfortable guidance, no, patient, patient. Well, my son can’t do it at all, yes, he’s always wondering how stupid his mother is and how stupid and so on, so I don’t feel at all like letting M. help me, but I need one. Partly I buy them, partly there’s a very nice neighbour who you can ask quickly and so on.”—DE_05 |
| e-Vita Coach |
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| First unspecific ideas |
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| “(157) (laughs) Yes. (clears throat) (…) Yes, there are two possibilities. One is that you communicate with real people via the internet. The other is that you communicate with a quasi, yes, what do you call it, an avatar or a virtual programme.”—DE_08 |
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| Appearance of the coach |
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| “(231) So I don’t think it would have to be a human image or something like that, but it could be somehow functional, that is, something that is the most convenient or something like that for them, so the functionality would be more important to me than the appearance.”—DE_04 |
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| Possible use scenarios |
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| Under COVID-19 |
| “(249) On the other hand, yes, if I could, for example, that also comes to mind spontaneously right now, if I could, for example, tell the machine how high the corona incidence is today”—DE_06 |
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| Social life |
| “(231) So, of course, it could be that you automatically establish contact with your friends and acquaintances, yes, at certain times, that you say, virtual coffee hour every Wednesday at 3 p.m. and the coaches, in inverted commas, then get together and organise that, yes, and get that going, that you simply talk to each other, no longer like we do now via a technology like that, but that it is automatically controlled. And the television switches on and the people can then talk to their friends via the television.”—DE_07 |
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| Everyday life |
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| Smart home | “(219) yes. (laughs) Yeah. So my phone, when I go in to the house, the lights turn on automatically and Siri says, hello, welcome home. It’s a little app that you wrote. They’re such gimmicks, so yeah. But ers is certainly for someone who has to live alone, that would certainly be a relief in certain situations, yes. Or also, for example, if you forget to turn off the cooker, that someone says, “Watch out, you have to go back to the kitchen and turn off the cooker, please”—DE_07 |
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| Physical support | “(247) Or to go to the door and receive the post or something like that. So, if I were limited in my mobility, if it could take over a bit, I would find that an advantage.Yes”—DE_04 |
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| Bookings/orders | “(171) Now I say my wife is scolding me, she won’t cook me lunch. I am so hungry. That then, I say, we know that there are delivery services and so on. It’s easy for a machine like that to get a delivery service going. So, yes, such things should also be programmed.”—DE_01 |
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| Providing information | “(177) Because of course it’s about everyday things that you can ask, about completely everyday things, household things, what should I cook now or how do I do it so that I don’t gain weight now.”—DE_03 |
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| Nutrition/cooking | “(257) so maybe also such an interaction that I can say, I have tomatoes there and cucumber and what can I make out of that. Something like that.”—DE_06 |
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| Dates/reminders | “(181) A further step would be to be reminded of certain appointments, or to take tablets regularly, to drink regularly, and perhaps also to exercise. So that means that this digital coach also keeps me on my toes a bit or reminds me, here, you haven’t done any gymnastics today.Move at least a little bit.”—DE_08 |
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| Health-related |
| “(257) For example, that there is also a kind of Facetime where I could correspond with my doctor somehow, so that the device says, for example, oh man, somehow, here, the blood pressure is now, I don’t know, too low or too high or so and you should go to the doctor now, then I don’t have to go there directly, but could do that, like we both do now (laughs).”—DE_04 |
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| Concerns/barriers |
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| Ethics |
| “(177) Well, let’s say it’s basically an ethical question how people and technology deal with each other, at what level, yes. And there’s quite a big danger that people might not want to cooperate with others too much emotionally or simply get too involved with technology, yes. Just like some people get up in the morning and switch on the television. And when they go to bed, they switch it off again. These are simply, let’s say, psychological aberrations.”—DE_07 |
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| Extra device |
| “(75) I would have, to put it harshly, I would have thought that any considerations in this project, if they were to arise, to combine everything in a separate device, would be nonsense.”—DE_02 |
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| Loss of control |
| “(237) But when they talk about the human, the human appearance, I would be quite frightened the first time. Above all, you don’t know whether it develops a life of its own and whether it isn’t stronger than me, more powerful than me. And I think it would be more important to be able to turn it off. So, I would be afraid that there is something that I can no longer cope with, especially as an old person.”—DE_03 |
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| (Data) privacy |
| “(227) There must be zones where the device does not record what you are doing in private, yes. So in the bedroom, for example, under normal circumstances I wouldn’t want it, yes. In emergencies, yes. But that’s the way it is. This great balancing act, yes. And I also didn’t want this virtual assistant to suddenly interfere in the conversation when I had visitors.”—DE_07 |
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| Financial barriers |
| “(185) Or, for example, a completely different movement, when you can no longer stand up and walk properly on your own, that you then have such an auxiliary device, (skeletograt?), where your muscles are supported. These would be quite virtual aspects (unv.) yes. But I don’t think that’s financially feasible in a normal household.”—DE_07 |
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| Dependence |
| “(200) No, that I just sit on the sofa or in the armchair and (laughs), and say, here, Alexa, bring me the slippers. (laughs) Now that’s an exaggeration, no, but that you, yes, I think there would be a risk that too much would be taken away from you, (incomp.).”—DE_08 |
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| Coach makes regulations |
| “(221) Yes, he shouldn’t dictate to me such a philosophy of life, how I should actually live. So, whether I should go for a walk five times a day or, well, rules, don’t make rules in that sense.”—DE_06 |
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| Requirements for use |
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| Time to get to know it |
| “(241) So I think it’s a pure habituation effect. If, when I would notice that it brings me something and I don’t have to be afraid of it, after a week, fourteen days. It’s a pure habituation effect”—DE_03 |
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| Funding |
| “(241) So, it has to be easy to use and it has to be affordable. (unv.) not lead to a (shall we say?) two-class society, yes. Otherwise, they say with such medical (unv.), digital services, it must appear in the catalogue of services of the health insurance companies.”—DE_07 |
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| Trustworthy company |
| “(281) Yes, it would be important to me that when something like this is made available to old people, that it is done by a trustworthy organisation, so that there are not five competing companies advertising: take my machine, take mine, take mine, and then you are overwhelmed again as to which is the best. So, I would say that this should be done by the state.”—DE_06 |
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| Procedure in case of problems |
| “(283) So (…) yes. And that it is also easy to find a service when things go wrong and you don’t have to hang around for three hours in some hotline or something, but that you can, yes, however, that the device itself sends out a call for help, I’m not working anymore or something like that, ne.”—DE_06 |
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| Personalization/comperability |
| “(213) Can I also make something individually suitable for ME or can I only use ready-made ones, so you can also expand it or switch off certain things.”—DE_06 |
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| Information on data use/sharing |
| “(293) But I would want to know how to use it and what the basic functions are, what data it collects and where this data goes. And I would also like to be able to control the data and delete it if necessary. So that would be important to me”—DE_04 |
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| Knowing the functions |
| “(195) Well, you have to know how it works, what it does, what it can do, what resources it needs, electricity for example, does it need a charging station, do you have to install it somehow, does it need a WLAN connection and things like that, these are all things that have to be clarified, yes. So from a purely technical point of view, yes. The question is, (unv.) many of my acquaintances from the digital compass would ask the question: What is the benefit? Yes, what can I do with this thing? Or does it just stand around in the way, yes.”—DE_07 |
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| Contact person |
| I: “(116) That this is brought to the people personally and that there is a close exchange, so to speak, a contact person?”A: “(117) (in between) Yes. Yes. Yes. And, well, we have often talked about the fact that, for example, this could also be a wide field for outpatient services, i.e., outpatient CARE services. (clears throat) For this, it would basically have to be included as a service that can be billed afterwards, right?”—DE_05 |
| Speech interaction |
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| First idea on interaction |
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| I: “(162) Hm. If, if you imagine that now, so you imagine that you could really have a normal conversation with the coach, how would that be for you?”
A: “(163) That’s great. I expect that too.”—DE_01 |
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| References |
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| “(297) Yes, that I would have the feeling that it is very much attuned to me personally and that it doesn’t just give such a, such a spooled-up three-variant somehow, so not, not that it is so very robotic, but that it is already somehow relatively close to life, so, you can maybe say it like that, hm”—DE_04 |
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| Barriers |
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| “(115) Text input is much easier to analyse than speech input and process. Certainly a speech input and output is then comfort, goes over text input and output, but the idea of this coach to stick only to this speech input and output, I think is too high a goal for now.”—DE_02 |