Title
From entry to access: how shareability comes about
Abstract
Shareability is a design principle that refers to how a system, interface, or device engages a group of collocated, co-present users in shared interactions around the same content (or the same object). This is broken down in terms of a set of components that facilitate or constrain the way an interface (or product) is made shareable. Central are the notions of access points and entry points. Entry points invite and entice people into engagement, providing an advance overview, minimal barriers, and a honeypot effect that draws observers into the activity. Access points enable users to join a group's activity, allowing perceptual and manipulative access and fluidity of sharing. We show how these terms can be useful for informing analysis and empirical research.
Year
DOI
Venue
2007
10.1145/1314161.1314191
DPPI
Keywords
Field
DocType
manipulative access,entry point,design principle,advance overview,minimal barrier,honeypot effect,co-present user,access point,empirical research,shared interaction,information analysis,digital photography
Honeypot,Digital photography,World Wide Web,Computer science,Human–computer interaction,Perception,Empirical research
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
53
2.40
25
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Eva Hornecker11636122.51
Paul Marshall264933.91
Yvonne Rogers34850448.33