Randomness as a resource for design
- š¤ Speaker: Tuck Leong, MSR Cambridge
- š Date & Time: Thursday 07 February 2008, 14:15 - 15:15
- š Venue: SS03
Abstract
Many people today have access to enormous libraries of digital content. Increasingly these libraries contain personal content, consumed in support of peopleās non-instrumental needs. If current trends persist, these repositories will only increase. Having to choose from so much could be unpleasant especially in the absence of strong preferences. This raises some concerns for user experience (UX) design. Within this design agenda, approaches for such interactions should not only be optimized for UX but must also support usersā non-instrumental needs. People face this predicament during digital music listening and yet report positive experiences when listening in shuffle. Through an empirical study of digital music listening and close examination of peopleās listening practices and experiences, we argue that a shuffle-based approachāwhereby people can abdicate choice to a random process while being able to modulate the randomnessānot only mitigates the unpleasantness of choosing but also supports their non-instrumental needs while fostering desirable experiential outcomes.
Series This talk is part of the Rainbow Interaction Seminars series.
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Thursday 07 February 2008, 14:15-15:15