Design ethnography for screenless interaction style: Hands-on and no-hands in early morning routines
conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 14:15authored bySarah Pink, Camille Caminha, Angelica de Souza, Renata Zilse, Alex Sandro Gomes
Possible digital technology futures are inevitably speculative, and tend to have present configurations as their points of reference. In this paper, we present the findings of design ethnography research which aims to create new understandings how screens are used in everyday routines, and the implications of this for the design of future screen interaction styles in everyday life contexts. We focus on the question of how hands are used in interactions with screens, why it is often impossible for hands to be used, and how users improvise to use screens without hands. To demonstrate this, we draw on examples of ethnographic research into everyday early morning routines where people deal with diverse materials, liquids, objects and surfaces as they prepare for the day ahead. Our findings show that mobile screen technology use and experience is inextricable from morning routines and shaped by the messiness and creative improvisations these routines involve. This, we argue, has implications for future technology design.
History
Number
a20
Start page
1
End page
10
Total pages
10
Outlet
Proceedings of the XVI Brazilian Symposium on Human Factors in Computing Systems (IHC 2017)
Editors
Isabela Gasparini, Lara S. G. Piccolo, Luciana A. M. Zaina, Roberto Pereira