Beyond the Pocket: A Large-Scale International Study on User Preferences on Bodily Placements of Commercial Wearables
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As wearables become smaller, more powerful, and increasingly embedded in everyday life, their integration into diverse user contexts raises important design challenges. Despite this, their placement is still largely informed by lab-based assumptions not grounded in real-world, context-specific use. It remains unclear whether the designs evaluated in controlled studies reflect users everyday needs, routines, and habits. To address this gap, we collect empirical data on how people carry wearables in their daily lives, beginning to systematically examine user preferences for wearable placement across contexts and routines. We developed a multilingual questionnaire to capture real-world wearable placement practices. Responses from n=300 participants recruited through typical research channels, reveal how wearable usage patterns vary with users. We propose a set of user-centred guidelines for sensor placement and discuss how they fit in assumptions seen in related work. This study contributes to ongoing efforts to design more inclusive, adaptable, and context-aware wearable systems.
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