In recent years electric scooters have proliferated, dominating the ride-share community. Unlike personal scooters or bicycles, communal scooters do not have the same levels of adjustability to accommodate different sizes of riders.
The objective of this assignment was to assess the ergonomics of rideshare scooters with respect to human anthropometry and function, and evaluate how well the product matches user anthropometry and function and make suggestions for usability improvements for current & prospective users.
Project Goal:
Assess the ergonomics of rideshare scooters realative to the anthropometry of their current and prospective user segments.
Make suggestions to improve user experience and support your suggestions with anthropometric statistics.
Duration: 3 weeks
Team: Michael Armstrong, Julio de Pereda, Yunuo Huang
Dahee Kim, Rob Stout, Iris Sun
Dahee Kim, Rob Stout, Iris Sun
Role: Methodology, Research & Market Analysis, Anthropometric Statistics, Story Design
Course: Human Centered Design