Cognitive and behavioral abilities alter across the adult life span. Smartphones engage various cognitive functions and the corresponding touchscreen interactions may help resolve if and how the behavioral dynamics are structured by aging. Here, in a sample spanning the adult lifespan (16 to 86 years, N = 598, accumulating 355 million interactions) we analyzed a range of interaction intervals – from a few milliseconds to a minute. We clustered the interactions according to their next inter-touch interval dynamics to discover age-related changes at the distinct temporal clusters. There were age-related behavioral losses at the clusters occupying short intervals (~ 100 ms, R2 ~ 0.8) but gains at the long intervals (~ 4 s, R2 ~ 0.4). These cor...
AbstractMuch is known about how age affects the brain during tightly controlled, though largely cont...
Abstract Understanding age-related change in cognition and identification of pathol...
The mass adoption of digital technologies has instigated a transition whereby people are no longer ‘...
Smartphones offer unique opportunities to trace the convoluted behavioral patterns accompanying heal...
Unconstrained day-to-day activities are difficult to quantify and how the corresponding movements sh...
The aim of this thesis is to provide an insight into the effects of user age on interactions with sm...
Smart phones and people are two things something not separate that from one another. Children, adol...
This paper investigates and extends existing knowledge on older adults' (65+) gestural interaction w...
The Dataset contains the information used as a basis for the publication - including the link to the...
Context: Mobile phones have entered our lives through technological developments, becoming the most ...
In this study, we employed a recall test to investigate how memory load affects the learning curve o...
Objective: This study presents an observation and analysis on behavioral characteristics of old user...
Although information and communication technologies have become an integral part of contemporary soc...
As a common neuroscientific observation, the more a body part is used, the less variable the corresp...
With the increasing adoption of the smartphone by people of all ages (Digimeter, 2020), the use of s...
AbstractMuch is known about how age affects the brain during tightly controlled, though largely cont...
Abstract Understanding age-related change in cognition and identification of pathol...
The mass adoption of digital technologies has instigated a transition whereby people are no longer ‘...
Smartphones offer unique opportunities to trace the convoluted behavioral patterns accompanying heal...
Unconstrained day-to-day activities are difficult to quantify and how the corresponding movements sh...
The aim of this thesis is to provide an insight into the effects of user age on interactions with sm...
Smart phones and people are two things something not separate that from one another. Children, adol...
This paper investigates and extends existing knowledge on older adults' (65+) gestural interaction w...
The Dataset contains the information used as a basis for the publication - including the link to the...
Context: Mobile phones have entered our lives through technological developments, becoming the most ...
In this study, we employed a recall test to investigate how memory load affects the learning curve o...
Objective: This study presents an observation and analysis on behavioral characteristics of old user...
Although information and communication technologies have become an integral part of contemporary soc...
As a common neuroscientific observation, the more a body part is used, the less variable the corresp...
With the increasing adoption of the smartphone by people of all ages (Digimeter, 2020), the use of s...
AbstractMuch is known about how age affects the brain during tightly controlled, though largely cont...
Abstract Understanding age-related change in cognition and identification of pathol...
The mass adoption of digital technologies has instigated a transition whereby people are no longer ‘...