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The toilet companion: a toilet brush that should be there for you and not for others

Published: 09 March 2015 Publication History

Abstract

In this article we present the Toilet Companion: an augmented toilet brush that aims to provide moments of joy in the toilet room, and if necessary, stimulates toilet goers to use the brush. Based upon the amount of time a user sits upon the toilet seat, the brush swings it handle with increasing speed: initially to draw attention to its presence, but over time to give a playful impression. Hereafter, the entire brush makes rapid up and downward movements to persuade the user to pick it up. In use, it generates beeps in response to human handling, to provide a sense of reward and accompanying pleasure. Despite our aims in providing joy and stimulation, participants from field trials with the Toilet Companion reported experiencing the brush as undesirable, predominantly because the sounds produced by the brush would make private toilet room activities publicly perceivable. The design intervention thus challenged the social boundaries of the otherwise private context of the toilet room, opening up an interesting area for design-ethnographic research about perception of space, where interactive artifacts can be mobilized to deliberately breach public, social, personal, and intimate spaces.

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DiSalvo, Carl. Adversarial design. The MIT Press, 2012.
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Gaver, William W., et al. The drift table: designing for ludic engagement. In CHI'04 extended abstracts on Human factors in computing systems. ACM (2004), 885--900.
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Hassenzahl, M., Eckoldt, K., Diefenbach, S., Laschke, M., Lenz, E., and Kim, J. (2013). Designing moments of meaning and pleasure. Experience design and happiness. International Journal of Design, 7(3), 21--31
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Hassenzahl, Marc, and Noam Tractinsky. User experience-a research agenda. Behaviour & Information Technology 25, 2 (2006), 91--97
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Turkle, Sherry, ed. Evocative objects: Things we think with. MIT press, 2007.
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Cited By

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  • (2019)Do You Have to Pee?Proceedings of the 2019 on Designing Interactive Systems Conference10.1145/3322276.3322290(1209-1222)Online publication date: 18-Jun-2019
  • (2015)Embodied TechnologyProceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems10.1145/2702613.2732899(1711-1716)Online publication date: 18-Apr-2015

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  1. The toilet companion: a toilet brush that should be there for you and not for others

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    Published In

    cover image ACM Other conferences
    AH '15: Proceedings of the 6th Augmented Human International Conference
    March 2015
    241 pages
    ISBN:9781450333498
    DOI:10.1145/2735711
    • General Chairs:
    • Suranga Nanayakkara,
    • Ellen Yi-Luen Do,
    • Program Chairs:
    • Jun Rekimoto,
    • Jochen Huber,
    • Bing-Yu Chen
    Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than the author(s) must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected].

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    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 09 March 2015

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    Author Tags

    1. HCI
    2. experience design
    3. private space
    4. space perception

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    AH '15
    AH '15: The 6th Augmented Human International Conference
    March 9 - 11, 2015
    Singapore, Singapore

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    Overall Acceptance Rate 121 of 306 submissions, 40%

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    Cited By

    View all
    • (2019)Do You Have to Pee?Proceedings of the 2019 on Designing Interactive Systems Conference10.1145/3322276.3322290(1209-1222)Online publication date: 18-Jun-2019
    • (2015)Embodied TechnologyProceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems10.1145/2702613.2732899(1711-1716)Online publication date: 18-Apr-2015

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