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Ecological data for manifesting the entanglement of more-than-human livingness

Published: 01 July 2024 Publication History

Abstract

Data in Design and HCI research is often associated with something captured from the world in digital form and transferred to a database. However, the assumption of digitalisation, as well as the intentions and values underlying it, can obscure more nuanced approaches to data, and is becoming increasingly criticised (e.g., through notions of data colonialism, data extractivism, etc.). In this workshop, we invite participants to critically review data concepts and practices that sustain Western industrialised socio-economic systems, considering their ethical, environmental, and ecological implications. In contrast, we will explore data in the entangled ecologies of organisms, matter, and environments, focusing on ‘livingness’ as a way to reveal embodied, relational, and situated aspects of data. Through wandering and foraging, we will discuss how these aspects of data might help us regain our attentiveness, appreciation, and responsibility towards more-than-human ecologies, and ultimately reframe concepts of data in the world.

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  1. Ecological data for manifesting the entanglement of more-than-human livingness

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    cover image ACM Conferences
    DIS '24 Companion: Companion Publication of the 2024 ACM Designing Interactive Systems Conference
    July 2024
    501 pages
    ISBN:9798400706325
    DOI:10.1145/3656156
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial International 4.0 License.

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    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 01 July 2024

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    Author Tags

    1. ecological data
    2. embodiment
    3. more-than-human
    4. relationality
    5. situatedness

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    • the European Union?s Horizon 2020 research

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    DIS '24
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    DIS '24: Designing Interactive Systems Conference
    July 1 - 5, 2024
    IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark

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    Overall Acceptance Rate 1,158 of 4,684 submissions, 25%

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