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1.
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2.
  • Berg, Martin, 1977-, et al. (författare)
  • Automation in the Wild : exploring empathy
  • 2015
  • Ingår i: Un/Certainty. - Melbourne : RMIT University. - 9780994333018 ; , s. 50-55
  • Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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3.
  • Fors, Vaike, 1969-, et al. (författare)
  • Capturing the Ordinary : Imagining the User in Designing Automatic Photographic Lifelogging Technologies
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: Lifelogging. - Wiesbaden : Springer. - 9783658131364 - 9783658131371 ; , s. 111-128
  • Bokkapitel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In this chapter we discuss how automatic wearable cameras are imagined by their designers. Such technologies have most often been approached from a user perspective, which overlooks how developers invest their personal experiences and emotions into the technologies. Focusing on the Narrative clip - a camera that takes a photo every 30 seconds, we show how developers its developers have imagined this camera as a device that enables people to gain access to the assumed authenticity of a recordable world, that exists externally to the human wearing the device. As this example shows, when we account for developers’ visions and imaginations, particular stories emerge. Thus, we argue it is important to account for these and the agency they might have in the possibilities created by automated technologies. © Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden 2016
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4.
  • Fors, Vaike, 1969-, et al. (författare)
  • How do we learn to know a self-driving car? : A pedagogical design anthropology approach to human - technology interaction
  • 2018
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • How will autonomous driving (AD) features change how people will relate to, and act in and with cars? To understand these and similar questions, research within human-computer interaction (HCI) is concerned with how people will react and interact with the autonomous driving features while driving a self-driving car, and how these features can be designed to be perceived as both easy to use and useful. In this paper we demonstrate how a pedagogical design anthropological approach can push this agenda further by introducing a way of understanding use of AD that accounts for how technologies become meaningful in the contexts of the mundane everyday life circumstances in which they are actually used. This approach entails understanding use of technology beyond the moment of human-technology interaction, as a process in which experiential ways of knowing take over from rational action, and meaning becomes generated through the ongoing use of technologies in everyday life processes. In the context user experience of AD, this translates into a focus on how people learn to use AD features, and to imagine possible experiences of AD in ways that are situated in the mundane routines of everyday life.We will draw on our ethnographic research into everyday life experiences and expectations of AD cars undertaken between 2016-18, to demonstrate how people need these technologies to become part of their everyday lives, and subsequently need to learn to use them in order to accomplish everyday goals.
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5.
  • Fors, Vaike, 1969-, et al. (författare)
  • Imagining Personal Data : Experiences of Self-Tracking
  • 2019. - 1
  • Bok (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Digital self-tracking devices and data have become normal elements of everyday life. Imagining Personal Data examines the implications of the rise of body monitoring and digital self-tracking for how we inhabit, experience and imagine our everyday worlds and futures. Through a focus on how it feels to live in environments where data is emergent, present and characterized by a sense of uncertainty, the authors argue for a new interdisciplinary approach to understanding the implications of self-tracking, which attends to its past, present and possible future. Building on social science approaches the book accounts for the concerns of scholars working in design, philosophy and human-computer interaction. It problematizes the body and senses in relation to data and tracking devices, presents an accessible analytical account of the sensory and affective experiences of self-tracking, and questions the status of big data. In doing so, the book proposes an agenda for future research and design that puts people at its centre.
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6.
  • Fors, Vaike, 1969-, et al. (författare)
  • Pedagogy as Possibility : Health Interventions as Digital Openness
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Social Sciences - Socialiniai. - Kaunas : Kaunas University of Technology. - 1392-0758 .- 2029-7319 .- 2076-0760. ; 6:2
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In this article we propose an approach to digital health tracking technologies that draws on design anthropology. This entails re-thinking the pedagogical importance of personal data as lying in how they participate in the constitution of new possibilities that enable people to learn about, and configure, their everyday health in new ways. There have been two dominant strands in traditional debates in the field of pedagogy: one that refers to processes of teaching people to do things in particular ways; and another that seeks to enable learning. The first of these corresponds with existing understandings of self-tracking technologies as either unsuccessful behavioural change devices, or as providing solutions to problems that do not necessarily exist. When seen as such, self-tracking technologies inevitably fail as forms of intervention towards better health. In this article we investigate what happens when we take the second strand—the notion of enabling learning as an incremental and emergent process—seriously as a mode of intervention towards health through self-tracking technologies. We show how such a shift in pedagogical understanding of the routes to knowing these technologies offer creates opportunities to move beyond simplistic ideas of behavioural change as the main application of digital body monitoring in everyday life. In what follows, we first demonstrate how the disjunctures that arise from this context emerge. We then outline a critical response to how learning through life-tracking has been conceptualised in research in health and human-computer interaction research. We offer an alternative response by drawing on a processual theory of learning and recent and emerging research in sociology, media studies, anthropology, and cognate disciplines. Then, drawing on ethnographic research, we argue for understanding learning through the production of personal data as involving emplaced and non-representational routes to knowing. This, we propose, requires a corresponding rethinking of the epistemological status of personal data and what kind of knowledge it can be claimed to produce. Finally, we take up the implications of this and advance the discussion through a design anthropological approach, through which we refigure the interventional potential of such technologies as lying in their capacity to create possibilities for experiential, and often unspoken, ways of embodied and emplaced knowing.
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7.
  • Lindgren, Thomas, 1973-, et al. (författare)
  • Experiencing Expectations : Extending the Concept of UX Anticipation
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Nordic Contributions in IS Research. - Cham : Springer. - 9783319963662 - 9783319963679 ; , s. 1-13
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This paper demonstrates the role of pre-product user experience (UX) in product design. For automotive companies, questions concerning how users will experience not yet available products is pressing - due to an increase in UX design for products, combined with a decrease in time-to-market for new products. Conventional UX research provides insights through investigating specific situated moments during use, or users’ reflections after use, yet cannot provide knowledge about how users will engage with not yet existing products. To understand pre-product UX we undertook a netnographic study of three people’s experiences of expecting and owning a Tesla car. We identified how modes of anticipation evolve before using the actual car, through online social interaction, creating a pre-product experience. The study offers a foundation for theorizing pre-product UX as socially generated anticipated UX, as well as insights for UX design in industry.
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8.
  • Lindgren, Thomas, 1973-, et al. (författare)
  • Experiencing the Future Car : Anticipatory UX as a Social and Digital Phenomenon
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems. - Göteborg : I R I S Association. - 0905-0167 .- 1901-0990. ; 31:1
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In order to be innovative and competitive, the automotive industry seeks to understand how to attract new customers, even before they have experienced the product. User Experience (UX) research often provides insights into situated uses of products, and reflections after their use, however tells us little about how products and services are experienced before use. We propose anticipation theory as a way to understand how shared experiences between people in an online discussion forum relate to UX of cars before they are actually experienced in real-life. We took an ethnographic approach to analyse the activities of members of a self-organised web-based discussion forum for Tesla car enthusiasts, to understand how product anticipation emerges in a digital-material setting. Our study identifies how anticipatory experiences create UX of car ownership which evolves through members’ engagement in a self-organised online community enabled through the digitalisation and connectivity of the car, and how such car experiences generate new forms of digital anticipation of the car. We conclude that the shift towards digitalisation of cars and subscription services creates a need for more interdisciplinary research into spatial and temporal aspects, where socially shared anticipatory experiences are increasingly important for the overall UX. © Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems,.
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9.
  • Lindgren, Thomas, 1973-, et al. (författare)
  • On the Way to Anticipated Car UX
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Proceedings of the 10th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction. - New York, NY, USA : ACM Digital Library. ; , s. 494-504, s. 494-504
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Traditional User Experience (UX) research provides insights into situated uses of products, or reflections after their use, but tells us little about how products are experienced before use. In this article we demonstrate how people’s engagement in web-based discussion forums creates ways through which they can experience products before they have actually used them, and reflect on the implications of this for UX research. To understand how product anticipation emerges in a digital-material setting we undertook an ethnographic analysis of members’ contributions to http://www.teslaclubsweden.se, a web based discussion forum that connects Tesla car enthusiasts. Anticipation developed as a shared endeavour that evolved through five ways which forum members engaged and participated in their community of practice. Through their online interactions their UX evolved before using the actual car. Our findings provide deeper understandings of anticipatory UX, and insights for UX design in HCI.
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10.
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11.
  • O'Dell, Thomas, et al. (författare)
  • Un/Certainty.
  • 2015
  • Bok (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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12.
  • Osz, Katalin, 1983-, et al. (författare)
  • Building Collaborative Test Practices : Design Ethnography and WOz in Autonomous Driving Research
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: IxD&A. - Rome : Interaction Design & Architectures. - 1826-9745 .- 2283-2998. ; :37, s. 12-20
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This article outlines a novel way of performing experimental "Wizard of Oz" (WOz) User Experience (UX) research that specifically targets driving in different levels of self-driving modes. The reasons for exploring the possibilities of combining experimental and ethnographic WOz-testing have been twofold. On the one hand, this mixed-method approach responds to a growing body of critique concerning how the WOz test is biased by the claim that it explores real-life behaviour in an experimental setting. On the other hand, our approach also meets the demands for innovative research methodologies that can contribute to deeper understandings of how to better evaluate and account for human expectations and experiences when automated technologies become integrated in everyday life contexts. This knowledge is inevitable for a broader understanding of the overall user experience and expectations of autonomous driving and, more specifically, building an interdisciplinary collaborative testing approach.
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13.
  • Osz, Katalin, 1983-, et al. (författare)
  • Combining WOz testing and ride along video ethnographies : advancing methodologies for Autonomous Driving car development for mixed traffic environments
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: OzCHI '18. - New York : ACM Press. - 9781450361880 ; , s. 252-255
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Experimental ‘Wizard of Oz’ (WOz) User Experience (UX) research in the context of Autonomous Driving (AD) car development is becoming more interdisciplinary, human-centric and open to innovative methodological collaborations. In this paper, we demonstrate a mixed-methodological approach to research how people engage with and make sense of automated features that do not yet exist in everyday life contexts. We present how the combination of WOz testing and ethnographic ride-alongs have been developed and how the two different approaches can benefit from each other. We selected two everyday driving examples - emerging from T-junction and changing lane on the motorway - to demonstrate the value of mixing these methodologies. We propose that by building new collaborative test practices, we can create a more everyday-life oriented approach that better attends to people’s experiences, imaginaries and projections into possible futures of driving, which is particularly important to incorporate in AD vehicle design for mixed traffic environments. © 2018 Association for Computing Machinery.
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14.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Automated futures and the mobile present : In-car video ethnographies
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: Ethnography. - London : Sage Publications. - 1466-1381 .- 1741-2714. ; 20:1, s. 88-107
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • New technological possibilities associated with autonomous driving (AD) cars are generating new questions and imaginaries about automated futures. In this article we advance a theoretical-methodological approach towards researching this context based in design anthropological theory and sensory ethnographic practice. In doing so we explain and discuss the findings of an in-car video ethnography study designed to investigate the usually unspoken and not necessarily visible elements of car-based mobility. Such an approach is needed, we argue, both in order to inform a research agenda that is capable of addressing the emergence of automated vehicles specifically, as well as in preparation for understanding the implications of automation more generally as human mobility is increasingly entangled with automated technologies and the future imaginaries associated with them.
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15.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Being in a mediated world : self-tracking and the mind–body–environment
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Cultural Geographies. - London : Sage Publications. - 1474-4740 .- 1477-0881. ; 24:3, s. 375-388
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Self-tracking is an increasingly ubiquitous everyday activity and therefore is becoming implicated in the ways that everyday environments are experienced and configured. In this article, we examine theoretically and ethnographically how the digital materiality of these technologies mediates and participates in the constitution of people’s tacit ways of being in the world. We argue that accounting for the presence of such technologies as part of everyday environments in this way offers new insights for non-representational accounts of everyday life as developed in geography and anthropology and advances existing understandings of these technologies as it has emerged in sociology and media studies.
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16.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Data Ethnographies 5 : Broken Data
  • 2016
  • Annan publikation (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • In a world where predictive big data analytics and data driven policy and design are increasingly prevalent, the concept of broken data seeks to interrogate and disrupt the possibilities associated with these trends. Concepts of breakage, damage and repair, and recent literatures about ‘broken world’ type theories, offer us an alternative starting point: what are the implications of putting these concepts at the centre of our understanding of digital data and its futures? By whom and where does data explicitly and more invisibly manifest itself as broken, incomplete and damaged? How is it repaired?What might an agenda for broken data research look like? And why might we need one?
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17.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Emerging technologies and anticipatory images : Uncertain ways of knowing with automated and connected mobilities
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Philosophy of Photography. - Bristol : Intellect Ltd.. - 2040-3682 .- 2040-3690. ; 9:2, s. 195-216
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In this article we outline two different ways of ‘seeing’ autonomous driving (AD) cars. The first corresponds with the technological innovation narrative, published in online industry, policy, business and other news contexts, that pitches AD cars as the solution to societal problems, and urges users to trust and accept them so that such benefits can be accrued. The second is a narrative of everyday improvisation, which was visualized through our video ethnography and participant mapping exercises. Our research, undertaken in Sweden, involved possible future everyday users of AD cars. We argue for a research and intervention agenda that examines how the visual narration of how AD cars might participate in human futures, could be shifted to create new modes of trust and reassurance for publics. 
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18.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Ethnography, Stakeholders, and Audiences : Toward Openness and Inclusivity
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Sociological Research Online. - London : Sage Publications. - 1360-7804. ; 22:4, s. 169-173
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • The environments in which ethnography is currently being played out are in many ways shifting as part of a world where academic research is increasingly implicated in applied and public scholarship and practice. This calls not simply for new ways of applying ethnographic insights to societal, industry, and policy problems but, we argue, for a reconfiguration of how we understand the possibilities, potentials, and impacts of ethnographic practice when situated as part of a world in progress. It invites us to revise how we understand ethnographic processes, practices, and ethics as they are played out with and through different sets of stakeholders, beyond researchers, participants, and the academic communities of critics (Strathern, 2006) who were their traditional audiences. This new context, we argue, takes us beyond past iterations of applied ethnography because there is a more widespread and institutionally driven aim to seek to do ethnographic work that has impact and may intervene in the world. This new institutionally endorsed and indeed encouraged way of practicing as an ethnographer and scholar brings new configurations and considerations to our profession. It makes partnering with industry or with creative practitioners unsurprising, yet at the same time potentially challenging. This Special Section represents our interest in exploring how this new and emerging context might be conceptualized and how it might be played out through responsible and ethical ways of conducting ethnographic research and forms of intervention in contemporary worlds. © The Author(s) 2017
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19.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Flow and intervention in everyday life : Situating practices
  • 2015
  • Ingår i: Social practices, intervention and sustainability. - : Taylor and Francis Inc.. - 9781138693043 - 9781317810803 - 9780415739634 ; , s. 163-178
  • Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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20.
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21.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Media, anthropology and public engagement
  • 2015
  • Bok (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Contemporary anthropology is done in a world where social and digital media are playing an increasingly significant role, where anthropological and arts practices are often intertwined in museum and public intervention contexts, and where anthropologists are encouraged to engage with mass media. Because anthropologists are often expected and inspired to ensure their work engages with public issues, these opportunities to disseminate work in new ways and to new publics simultaneously create challenges as anthropologists move their practice into unfamiliar collaborative domains and expose their research to new forms of scrutiny. In this volume, contributors question whether a fresh public anthropology is emerging through these new practices. © 2015 Sarah Pink and Simone Abram. All rights reserved.
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22.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Mundane data : The routines, contingencies and accomplishments of digital living
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Big Data and Society. - Thousand Oaks : Sage Publications. - 2053-9517. ; 4:1
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This article develops and mobilises the concept of 'mundane data' as an analytical entry point for understanding Big Data. We call for in-depth investigation of the human experiences, routines, improvisations and accomplishments which implicate digital data in the flow of the everyday. We demonstrate the value of this approach through a discussion of our ethnographic research with self-tracking cycling commuters. We argue that such investigations are crucial in informing our understandings of how digital data become meaningful in mundane contexts of everyday life for two reasons: first because there is a gap in our understanding of the contingencies and specificities through which big digital data sets are produced, and second because designers and policy makers often seek to make interventions for change in everyday contexts through the presentation of mundane data to consumers but with little understanding of how people produce, experience and engage with these data.
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23.
  • Pink, Sarah (författare)
  • Photographic places and digital wayfaring : Conceptualizing relationships between cameras, connectivities and transformed localities
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: Digital Photography and Everyday Life. - Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge. - 9781138899810 - 9781138899803 - 9781315696768 ; , s. 186-190
  • Bokkapitel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This chapter elaborates on two concepts which the author have used in his existing work, and that he would consider to be part of a theoretical ‘tool box’ that digital media scholars might draw on: place and wayfaring. The concept of place is well established across a range of literature, and has been used most consistently in human geography, as well as in anthropology. In the case of digital photography and its online sharing, for instance, photographs might be produced in localities, they might represent aspects of localities and they might also be viewed in localities. Camera phone photography is particularly interesting in this respect because people might take photographs of their environments and/or themselves in them, upload them and engage with people in relation to them online. Digital photography is one of the everyday life, professional and technological practices and activities that are entangled with everyday life, and both photographic technologies and practices become increasingly ubiquitous. © 2016 selection and editorial matter, Edgar Gómez Cruz and Asko Lehmuskallio; individual chapters, the contributors.
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24.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Samverkansetik
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Samverkansformer. - Lund : Studentlitteratur AB. - 9789144121383 ; , s. 69-91
  • Bokkapitel (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)
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25.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Self-tracking and mobile media : New digital materialities
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Mobile Media & Communication. - London : Sage Publications. - 2050-1579 .- 2050-1587. ; 5:3, s. 219-238
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In this article we take the novel step of bringing together recent scholarship about mobile media and communications with new ethnographic research and scholarship about mobile self-tracking. The correspondences and entanglements between mobile media and self-tracking technologies, and scholarship, we argue, are usefully considered in relation to each other both empirically and theoretically. Indeed, we propose that the convergence between self-tracking and mobile media means that we will increasingly need to account for their entanglements in mobile media research, and that there is therefore a need to explore the implications of taking the new step of approaching self-tracking research through the prism of mobile media scholarship. © The Author(s) 2017
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26.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Sensory, Digital and Visual Methodologies
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Routledge Handbook of Physical Cultural Studies. - Abingdon : Routledge. - 9781138817210 - 9781315745664 ; , s. 528-536
  • Bokkapitel (refereegranskat)
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27.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • Sensory, Digital and Visual Methodologies
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Routledge Handbook of Physical Cultural Studies. - Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2017. | Series: : Routledge. - 9781138817210 ; , s. 528-536
  • Bokkapitel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • This chapter argues that researching physical activity now often means researching activity in a world that traverses the online and offline, the digital and material. It explains how technologies that are implicated in physical activity cross over into our research; how can we engage digital and visual technologies that are part of the world of physical activity to serve our research processes, and how can we use these technologies actively as researchers. The chapter then discusses visual, digital and sensory methods with regard to social context, through three examples: digital autoethnography; digital video; data visualization. By measuring, interpreting and correlating data sources, body monitoring devices provide an understanding that goes beyond everyday self-knowledge and add a digital voice to the practice of autoethnography. The chapter also discusses an interview with Pelle who had used digital devices and apps for body monitoring for the past 10–15 years. 
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28.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • The contingent futures of the mobile present : automation as possibility
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Mobilities. - Abingdon : Routledge. - 1745-0101 .- 1745-011X. ; 13:5, s. 615-631
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In this article we outline and demonstrate a design anthropological approach to investigating automated mobile futures as a processual opening up of possibilities, rather than as a process of technological innovation. To undertake this we investigate the example of how the car-smartphone relationship is configuring in the contingent circumstances of the mobile present and the implications of this for automated mobile futures. Our discussion is set in the context of the growing possibility that automonous driving (AD) features are increasingly part of everyday mobilities (even if unequally distributed globally) and in which personal mobile smart technologies and artificial intelligence (AI) will exist in some form and will interface with humans and be interoperable with other technologies. In developing this we draw on ethnographic understandings of how people live with the possibilities afforded by technologies in everyday life. © 2018 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group
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29.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. (författare)
  • The lit world : living with everyday urban automation
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Social & cultural geography (Print). - Abingdon : Routledge. - 1464-9365 .- 1470-1197. ; 19:7, s. 833-852
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In this article, we develop and advance the concept of the lit world by bringing together literatures about everyday lighting, automation in everyday life and human perception, along with our ethnographic research into people’s experience of automated lighting in Melbourne, Australia. In doing so we formulate and argue for an approach to automation that situates it as part of everyday mundane worlds and acknowledges its entanglement with the emergent and experiential qualities of everyday environments as they unfold. We demonstrate this through the example of automated lighting, understood as a situated technology that has contingent effects and participates in the making of particular ways of seeing and feeling the world. We thereby argue for an account of automation that reaches beyond its potential for the management of human (and other) behaviour, to ask how the qualities and affordances of automated technologies might seep out of their intended domains, and create new perceptual and experiential opportunities. In a context where automation is increasingly prevalent in everyday life, such attention to the experience and use of automated technologies which already exist on a large scale is needed. Urban lighting is an example par excellence of automation in the world because it has a long history beyond the recent association of automated technologies with code and digital infrastructures. As scholars debate how automated technologies will become part of our future digital lives, understanding how people live in a lit world offers a starting point for considering how we might live with other anticipated algorithmic forms of automation. © 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group
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30.
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31.
  • Raats, Kaspar, 1981-, et al. (författare)
  • Understanding Trust in Automated Vehicles
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: OZCHI'19. - New York, NY : Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). - 9781450376969 ; , s. 352-358
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Autonomous vehicles (AVs) are developed to increase safety, and bring environmental benefits. Nevertheless, there is growing skepticism in society regarding these technologies, a tendency that centres issues of trust in research and design of future AVs. In this paper, we raise the question of how trust has been understood and researched in relation to automation within the field of HumanComputer Interaction (HCI) thus far and what has been identified as key issues to deepen our understanding of personal trust in contemporary AVs. To answer this question, we systematically reviewed 232 HCI research articles on trust in automation and AVs to identify a) key aspects of contemporary trust research theories and methodologies, and b) what dimensions of trust are in need of further investigation in relation to UX perspectives on trust. Based on the review, we discuss methodological implications of focusing on the experience of trust in future research. © 2019 Association for Computing Machinery.
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32.
  • Sumartojo, Shanti, et al. (författare)
  • The affective intensities of datafied space
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: Emotion, Space and Society. - Amsterdam : Elsevier. - 1755-4586 .- 1878-0040. ; 21, s. 33-40
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • The concept of datafication - which refers to the idea that many aspects of life can be rendered into digital data which can subsequently be analysed and used to understand, predict and guide interventions in society - has been both enthusiastically engaged with and critically deconstructed in recent literatures. In this article, we explore the relevance of datification for understanding the spatiality of everyday life. In doing so, we argue for a refigured concept of datafication through theoretical and empirical scholarship focused on affect. We suggest that a renewed concept of datafication - that is, of datafied space - offers a framework for how we dwell in and move through a world where digital data about humans have an increasing presence. To make our arguments, we offer an account of a recent study of cycle-commuting and self-tracking in Melbourne and Canberra, Australia. We used helmet-mounted action cameras and video interviews in a 'digital sensory ethnography' to explore the entanglement of bodies, bicycles, digital devices, data and affect that shape how people move through and make sense of what we call 'datafied space'. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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33.
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34.
  • Willim, Robert, et al. (författare)
  • Broken data : Conceptualising data in an emerging world
  • 2018
  • Ingår i: Big Data and Society. - Thousand Oaks : SAGE Publications. - 2053-9517. ; 5:1, s. 1-13
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • In this article, we introduce and demonstrate the concept-metaphor of broken data. In doing so, we advance critical discussions of digital data by accounting for how data might be in processes of decay, making, repair, re-making and growth, which are inextricable from the ongoing forms of creativity that stem from everyday contingencies and improvisatory human activity. We build and demonstrate our argument through three examples drawn from mundane everyday activity: the incompleteness, inaccuracy and dispersed nature of personal self-tracking data; the data cleaning and repair processes of Big Data analysis and how data can turn into noise and vice versa when they are transduced into sound within practices of music production and sound art. This, we argue is a necessary step for considering the meaning and implications of data as it is increasingly mobilised in ways that impact society and our everyday worlds.
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Så här hanterar KB dina uppgifter vid användning av denna tjänst.

 
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