Collocated interaction : new challenges in 'same time, same place' research
Abstract
In the 25 years since Ellis, Gibbs, and Rein proposed the time-space taxonomy, research in the 'same time, same place' quadrant has diversified, perhaps even fragmented. This one-day workshop will bring together researchers with diverse, yet convergent interests in tabletop, surface, mobile, and wearable technologies, spaces and spatial interaction, and those interested in the social aspects of interaction, such as conversation analysis and ethnomethodology. These communities have matured considerably, and produced significant exemplars of systems, methods, and studies concerned with collocated interactions. Yet, new challenges abound as people wear and carry more devices than ever, creating fragmented device ecologies at work, and changing the ways we socialise with each other. In this workshop we seek to start a dialogue to look back as well as forward, review best practices, discuss and design paper-prototypes using the collocated design framework, to consider how we might address new and future challenges through collocated design practice.
Citation
Fischer , J E , Porcheron , M , Lucero , A , Quigley , A , Scott , S D , Ciolfi , L , Rooksby , J & Memarovic , N 2016 , Collocated interaction : new challenges in 'same time, same place' research . in CSCW '16 Companion Proceedings of the 19th ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing Companion . ACM , pp. 465-472 , 19th ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing, CSCW 2016 , San Francisco , United States , 26/02/16 . https://doi.org/10.1145/2818052.2855522 conference
Publication
CSCW '16 Companion Proceedings of the 19th ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing Companion
Type
Conference item
Rights
Copyright 2016 the Authors. This work is made available online in accordance with the publisher’s policies. This is the author created, accepted version manuscript following peer review and may differ slightly from the final published version. The final published version of this work is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2818052.2855522
Description
Joel E. Fischer is supported by EPSRC grants EP/L02392X/1 and EP/M000877/1. Martin Porcheron is supported by EPSRC grants EP/G037574/1 and EP/G065802/1. Nemanja Memarovic is supported by Forschungskredit of the University of Zurich, grant no. FK-15-020.Collections
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