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Deployments of the table-non-table: A Reflection on the Relation Between Theory and Things in the Practice of Design Research

Published: 21 April 2018 Publication History

Abstract

Design-oriented research in HCI has increasingly migrated towards theoretical perspectives to understand the implications of newly crafted technology in everyday life. However, in this context, the relations between theory and understanding the things we make are not always clear, especially the degree to which the nature of research artifacts is revealed through or determined by theory. We examine a series of field deployment studies we conducted with our research artifact table-non-table over the course of four and a half years that we came to see as a postphenomenological inquiry. Importantly, our interpretations of this artifact, methodological concerns, and theoretical groundings evolved over time. We account for and critically reflect on these shifts in the relationship between theory and our design artifact. We detail how theory was enacted and embodied in our design research practice and offer insights into the complex relations between theory and things in design-oriented HCI research.

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    cover image ACM Conferences
    CHI '18: Proceedings of the 2018 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
    April 2018
    8489 pages
    ISBN:9781450356206
    DOI:10.1145/3173574
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    Published: 21 April 2018

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    Author Tags

    1. design theory
    2. field studies
    3. postphenomenology
    4. research through design

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    • Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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    • (2024)Articulating Mechanical Sympathy for Somaesthetic Human-Machine RelationsProceedings of the 2024 ACM Designing Interactive Systems Conference10.1145/3643834.3661514(3336-3353)Online publication date: 1-Jul-2024
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