Supporting Older Adults Living Independently
The ageing population is a worldwide challenge. The World Health Organisation predicts that by 2030 one in six adults will be aged 60 or above. Technology is increasingly seen a part of the solution, especially when it can support older adults to remain independent, living in their own homes. Key to this trend is the embedding of unobtrusive sensors into people’s domestic setting and the deployment of wearables to monitor the physical well-being of individuals. In our work we are aiming to develop a personalised approach that only captures data in settings that the individual is content with, and to analyse the data against their own expectations and goals. The captured data is used to build a formal model which is verified against personalised properties expressed in temporal logic. Here violations do not signify failure, but rather interesting data points that can trigger conversations with the individuals, their carers and in some cases their medical team.