StepsConnect: A Real-Time Step-Sensing Ambient Display System to Support Connectedness for Family Members Living Apart
Abstract
1. Introduction
- We introduce StepsConnect, a real-time step-sensing-based ambient display system that translates everyday walking activity into expressive digital art, exploring how embodied activity signals can be represented as subtle presence cues in intergenerational contexts.
- We report an exploratory user study with young adult–parent dyads that examines how ambient visualization of real-time step activity is perceived by young adults within everyday work environments, considering both quantitative patterns and qualitative accounts.
- We provide preliminary design insights for human-centered sensing systems, clarifying how natural bodily activity signals and aesthetic representation may support momentary relational awareness and establishing a foundation for future investigations into bidirectional and long-term intergenerational communication systems.
2. Related Works
2.1. Step-Sensing-Based Ambient Awareness System for Remote Family Connectedness
2.2. Representations of Digital Art in Ambient Displays
2.3. Summary and Research Gap
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. StepsConnect System Design
3.1.1. System Components and Functional Layers
- Component 1: Mobile sensing application (StepsConnect app), which runs on the parent’s Android smartphone and captures step count data from the device’s built-in pedometer.
- Component 2: Cloud database (Cloud Firestore), which stores and synchronizes step count data across devices in real time.
- Component 3: Web-based data interface, which retrieves step data from the cloud and prepares it for visual visualization.
- Component 4: Ambient digital art visualization, which transforms step data into a continuously evolving visual scene shown on a wall-mounted screen.
3.1.2. Step Count Data Processing Pipeline
3.1.3. Step Count Data Acquisition
3.1.4. Step Count Data Transmission and Cloud Synchronize
3.1.5. Web-Based Step Count Data Interface
3.1.6. Ambient Digital Art Visualization of Step Count Data
3.2. Study Design
3.2.1. Participants
3.2.2. Experimental Setup and Procedure
- Experimental Setup
- 2.
- Procedure
- First step: preparation
- Second step: in-lab experience
- Third step: interview
- 3.
- Walking data acquisition
3.2.3. Measurements
- Inclusion of Other Scale (IOS)
- Semi-structured Interview
- Steps Counts of Young Adults’ Parents
3.2.4. Quantitative Statistical Analysis
3.2.5. Qualitative Data Analysis
3.2.6. Steps Count Analysis
4. Results
4.1. IOS Scale
4.2. Semi-Structured Interview
4.2.1. Experience of the StepsConnect System
- Connectedness & Presence
- Reminder of Parents
- Feeling of presence
- Feeling of connectedness
- Emotional distance
- 2.
- System Qualities
- Decorative Integration
- Non-intrusiveness
- Low-pressure Interaction
- Surveillance concern
- 3.
- Visual Interpretation
- Intuitive Interpretation
- Imaginative Engagement
- Memory-evoking Qualities
- 4.
- Other Emotional Response
- Calm and Relaxation
- Unsettling Emotions
4.2.2. Expectations for the StepsConnect System
- Desire for additional information
- 2.
- Desire for multi-sensory channel
- 3.
- Desire for more personalized visual elements
- 4.
- Desire for two-way interaction
- 5.
- Desire for more engaging interactions
- 6.
- Improving accessibility for older adults.
4.3. Objective Step Activity Data Overview
4.4. Summary of Results
5. Discussion
5.1. Discussion of Experience for the StepsConnect System
- Connectedness & Presence
- 2.
- System Qualities
- 3.
- Visual Interpretation
- 4.
- Other Experience Emotions
5.2. Design Implications
- Provide richer activity information through multi-sensory and personalized feedback. Participants valued access to additional contextual details about their parents’ daily activity and well-being. Ambient systems should present activity cues using multiple sensory channels, such as subtle sound, light, animation, or haptics. This includes enabling personalization of visual elements that reflect family identity, memories, or cultural familiarity. Designers should therefore support configurable levels of detail that allow families to balance awareness with privacy.
- Support reciprocal, two-way awareness to foster mutual presence. Designers should incorporate bidirectional awareness and lightweight responses that allow both parties to acknowledge one another, creating a sense of shared presence rather than passive observation.
- Create opportunities for deeper, voluntary engagement layered on top of ambient cues. Ambient cues should operate effortlessly in the background, while richer interactions should be readily available when users want to transition into more meaningful, focused moments. This balance addresses the tension between low-effort expectations and the desire for emotionally engaging experiences.
- Intergenerational systems should prioritize accessibility, including simplified onboarding, installation-free interfaces, pre-configured devices, or alternative channels that minimize cognitive load for older adults. Lowering these barriers is essential for adoption and sustained use.
5.3. Limitations
5.4. Future Work
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Experiment Procedure | Duration | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Preparation | App installation on parent’s phone and usage teach | Flexible | |
| In-lab Experience | Consent form sign + general information fill + Initial IOS scale fill | 10 min | |
| Check the APP on the parent’s phone works | Flexible | ||
| Experience presentation | Work (25 min) + Rest (5 min) | 90 min | |
| Work (25 min) + Rest (5 min) | |||
| Work (25 min) + Rest (5 min) | |||
| IOS Scale fill after experience | 5 min | ||
| Interview | Semi-structured Interview (audio record) | 20 min | |
| Parent ID | Total Steps/90 min | Mean Steps/min | Young Adults’ IOS |
|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | 48 | 0.53 | 0 |
| P2 | 326 | 3.62 | 0 |
| P3 | 67 | 0.74 | +1 |
| P4 | 399 | 4.43 | 0 |
| P5 | 1315 | 14.61 | 0 |
| P6 | 800 | 8.89 | +2 |
| P7 | 72 | 0.80 | +1 |
| P8 | 76 | 0.84 | 0 |
| P9 | 1678 | 18.64 | 0 |
| P10 | 68 | 0.76 | 0 |
| P11 | 98 | 1.09 | +1 |
| P12 | 3672 | 40.80 | +1 |
| P13 | 40 | 0.44 | 0 |
| P14 | 969 | 10.77 | 0 |
| P15 | 2752 | 30.58 | 0 |
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© 2026 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
Share and Cite
Wang, R.; Lu, T.; Wang, F.; Lu, Y.; Hu, J. StepsConnect: A Real-Time Step-Sensing Ambient Display System to Support Connectedness for Family Members Living Apart. Sensors 2026, 26, 1726. https://doi.org/10.3390/s26051726
Wang R, Lu T, Wang F, Lu Y, Hu J. StepsConnect: A Real-Time Step-Sensing Ambient Display System to Support Connectedness for Family Members Living Apart. Sensors. 2026; 26(5):1726. https://doi.org/10.3390/s26051726
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Rui, Tianqin Lu, Feng Wang, Yuan Lu, and Jun Hu. 2026. "StepsConnect: A Real-Time Step-Sensing Ambient Display System to Support Connectedness for Family Members Living Apart" Sensors 26, no. 5: 1726. https://doi.org/10.3390/s26051726
APA StyleWang, R., Lu, T., Wang, F., Lu, Y., & Hu, J. (2026). StepsConnect: A Real-Time Step-Sensing Ambient Display System to Support Connectedness for Family Members Living Apart. Sensors, 26(5), 1726. https://doi.org/10.3390/s26051726

