During the design of sports equipment, the main focus is usually on physical
performance attributes, neglecting key subjective factors such as feel or comfort. The personal
protective equipment worn in sport is a typical example of where injury prevention has taken
precedence over user comfort, but it is anticipated that, with an improved approach to the
design process, comfort can be enhanced without sacrificing protection. Using cricket leg
guards as an example, this study aims to develop a systematic method for assessing user
perceptions and incorporating them into the design process. Using this method, players’ perceptions
of the factors that influence comfort were elicited through the use of co-discovery
sessions, focus groups, and individual interviews and analysed through an inductive process to
produce a comfort model. The relative importance of the different comfort dimensions were
identified through the use of an online questionnaire utilizing the analytical hierarchy process
method. Through the combination of these methods, six general dimensions were identified
with a weighting regarding the amount to which each one determines a user’s perceived
comfort. These results demonstrate how subjective analysis can be integrated into the design
process, allowing for end users’ preferences to be considered and integrated.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Citation
WEBSTER, J. and ROBERTS, J.R., 2009. Incorporating subjective end-user perceptions in the design process: a study of leg guard comfort in cricket. Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part P: Journal of Sports Engineering and Technology, 223 (2), pp.49-62.