HCJan 25, 2022
Playing The Ethics Card: Ethical Aspects In Design Tools For Inspiration And EducationAlbrecht Kurze, Arne Berger
This paper relates findings of own research in the domain of co-design tools in terms of ethical aspects and their opportunities for inspiration and in HCI education. We overview a number of selected general-purpose HCI/design tools as well as domain specific tools for the Internet of Things. These tools are often card-based, not only suitable for workshops with co-designers but also for internal workshops with students to include these aspects in the built-up of their expertise, sometimes even in a playful way.
HCJan 25, 2022
Scented Dice: New interaction qualities for ideating connected devicesAlbrecht Kurze
Much research has been done around creating multisensory ideation and prototyping tools. We relate our own multisensory tool, the Loaded Dice, to this domain. We briefly explain what sensing and actuating possibilities the Loaded Dice already have (including thermal sensations), and how they are methodically embedded in workshops using an extended interaction vocabulary to characterize and ideate multisensory experiences. We briefly ponder simple technical ways to add smell as an output modality, and discuss why and how smell capabilities will enrich ideation workshops in co-design.
HCJan 25, 2022
Wicked Implications for Human Interaction with IoT Sensor DataAlbrecht Kurze, Andreas Bischof
Human data interaction with sensor data from smart homes can cause some implications when it comes to human sensemaking of this data. With our data-driven method Guess the Data for individual and collective data work we revealed in previous work a number of potential pitfalls when interacting with this type of data. We introduce some of the identified, often wicked implications for further discussion.
HCDec 31, 2019
From Ideation to Implications: Directions for the Internet of Things in the HomeAlbrecht Kurze, Arne Berger, Teresa Denefleh
In this paper we give a brief overview of our approaches and ongoing work for future directions of the Internet of Things (IoT) with a focus on the IoT in the home. We highlight some of our activities including tools and methods for an ideation-driven approach as well as for an implications-driven approach. We point to some findings of workshops and empirical field-studies. We show examples for new classes of idiosyncratic IoT devices, how implications emerge by (mis)using sensor data and how users interacted with IoT systems in shared spaces.