Title
Activitity as the Ultimate Particular of Interaction Design.
Abstract
In the turn towards practice-oriented research in interaction design, one of the most important proposals has been the emphasis on the 'ultimate particulars' produced by design, as embodiments of design knowledge. In current HCI research, those particulars are almost always taken to be 'things' artefacts or singular systems. We argue that this emphasis may have come at a cost that can be described as a loss of identity; interaction design research was never primarily concerned with the design of artefacts, but with how humans act and interact with each other with and through artefacts. We propose a complementary perspective by looking at design projects and traditions where the 'ultimate particulars' can be considered to be activities rather than things. The article is concerned with how knowledge needs to be articulated in the scholarly engagement with such design practices. We argue that engagement with activity-centric design gets design research one step closer towards understanding salient contemporary design practices and what Buchanan calls 'environmental design'.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.1145/3025453.3025990
CHI
Keywords
Field
DocType
Research through design, third wave HCI, ultimate particular, activity-centric design, second order design, environmental design
Design knowledge,Interaction design,Computer science,Environmental design,Singular systems,Environmental graphic design,Design research,Human–computer interaction,Experience design,Salient
Conference
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.35
19
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Annika Waern130637.62
Jon Back2225.64