TY - BOOK AU - Langdon,Patrick AU - Clarkson,John AU - Robinson,Peter AU - Lazar,Jonathan AU - Heylighen,Ann ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Designing Inclusive Systems: Designing Inclusion for Real-world Applications SN - 9781447128670 AV - TA174 U1 - 620.0042 23 PY - 2012/// CY - London PB - Springer London KW - Engineering KW - Rehabilitation KW - Computer science KW - Computer aided design KW - Engineering design KW - Biomedical engineering KW - Engineering Design KW - Computer-Aided Engineering (CAD, CAE) and Design KW - Biomedical Engineering KW - User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction KW - Control, Robotics, Mechatronics N1 - 1. Designing for Real-World Applications: Work and Healthcare -- 2. Designing Inclusive Assistive and Rehabilitation Systems -- 3. Measuring Product Demand and People’s Capabilities -- 4. Mainstreaming and Scaling Technology for Healthcare -- 5. Designing Cognitive Interaction with Emerging Technologies -- 6. Effective Engagement with Industry -- 7. Designing Inclusive Spaces: Architecture and Buildings -- 8. Collaborative and Participatory Design for Inclusion -- 9. Data Issues: Visualizing Inclusion: Mining of Profile Data -- 10. Legislation, Standards and Policy in Inclusive Design N2 - The Cambridge Workshops on Universal Access and Assistive Technology (CWUAAT) are a series of workshops held at a Cambridge University College every two years. The workshop theme: “Designing inclusion for real-world applications” refers to the emerging potential and relevance of the latest generations of inclusive design thinking, tools, techniques, and data, to mainstream project applications such as healthcare and the design of working environments. Inclusive Design Research involves developing tools and guidance enabling product designers to design for the widest possible population, for a given range of capabilities. There are five main themes: •Designing for the Real-World •Measuring Demand And Capabilities •Designing Cognitive Interaction with Emerging Technologies •Design for Inclusion •Designing Inclusive Architecture In the tradition of CWUAAT, we have solicited and accepted contributions over a wide range of topics, both within individual themes and also across the workshop’s scope. We ultimately hope to generate more inter-disciplinary dialogues based on focused usage cases that  can provide the discipline necessary to drive further novel research, leading to better designs. The aim is to impact industry and end-users as well governance and public design, thereby effectively reducing exclusion and difficulty in peoples’ daily lives and society UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-2867-0 ER -