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[ecrea] CfP: CHI 2013 Workshop on Studying Technology in the Home
Tue Dec 18 08:11:57 GMT 2012
Call for Participation:
METHODS FOR STUDYING TECHNOLOGY IN THE HOME A workshop to be held as
part of ACM CHI 2013.
April 27th, 2013.
Palais de Congrès, Paris, France.
Position Papers due: January 11th, 2013.
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CONTACT
Website: http://studyingthehome.wp.horizon.ac.uk/
Please email us with any queries or ideas at: (studyingthehome /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(studyingthehome /at/ gmail.com)>
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OVERVIEW
This workshop will explore the methods used to study our interactions
with technology in home contexts. We will share practices, identify key
issues and potential for innovations in this space.
Technology is becoming ever more integral to our home lives, and visions
such as ubiquitous computing, smart technologies and the Internet of
Things represent a further stage of this development. However studying
interactions and experiences in the home, and drawing understanding from
this to inform design, is a substantial challenge for many researchers
in Human-Computer Interaction and other disciplines.
In collecting data, understanding current practices, and evaluating
potential designs, researchers need to consider a range of specific
issues, such as domestication processes and intrusiveness. We also need
to understand how varied relationships, activities, objects and physical
spaces constitute our individual home lives. New technologies present
opportunities for further data to be collected in home environments, but
require a deep understanding of issues specific to home life.
This workshop will bring together a cross-disciplinary group of
researchers with experiences of researching technology in the home, in
order to map the space of methods in use, identify connections, tensions
and gaps, and explore the potential for further innovation to meet the
challenges we face. Together we will develop a coherent understanding of
this methodological space, and identify connections and gaps, where
further development of methods can occur to overcome issues specific to
studying the home.
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CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
We invite you to submit a 2-4 page position paper, based on your
interests and experiences with studying technology in the home. This
paper should outline a method that you have used in your research, and
critically reflect on the application of this method to a study related
to the home. It should then highlight the particular challenges faced,
how the method used was, or could be, combined with other approaches,
and how it could be further refined.
We invite contributions from researchers working in areas including, but
not restricted to:
-Ethnographic or observational studies in homes, including dormitories
and shared buildings
-Approaches to exploring design through narratives, e.g. scenarios or
user enactments
-Prototype design and evaluation studies using field trials in homes,
lab studies and smart home demonstrators built for research purposes
-Living Lab and action research approaches to innovation related to the home
-Automated approaches to capturing or analysing quantitative data about
activities in the home
-Application areas such as medical, assistive and e-health technologies,
media and entertainment, smart appliances, smart grids, behaviour
change, technologies for families, children and the elderly, home
automation and many others where the home is a key context of use.
In particular, we invite submissions which explore this space from an
interdisciplinary perspective, and consider how the research areas above
are combined in research projects. For example how ethnographic methods
can be used in conjunction with creative design processes, or how
qualitative understanding can be used in conjunction with quantitative
data collected from sensors and logs of activity around the home.
Submissions due: January 11th 2013.
Notifications: February 8th 2013.
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ORGANISERS
Tim Coughlan, Michael Brown & Sarah Martindale, University of
Nottingham, UK.
Rob Comber & Thomas Ploetz, Newcastle University, UK.
Kerstin Leder Mackley & Val Mitchell, Loughborough University, UK.
Sharon Baurley, Brunel University, UK.
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