How HCI Interprets the Probes
- đ¤ Speaker: Alan Blackwell and Richard Harper
- đ Date & Time: Thursday 07 June 2007, 11:00 - 12:30
- đ Venue: Jasmine Room, Microsoft Research Cambridge
Abstract
Boehner, K. Vertesi, J. Sengers, P. & Dourish, P. (2007). How HCI Interprets the Probes. In Proc. SIGCHI Conf. Human factors in computing systems (CHI’07). pp. 1077-1086
Original abstract: We trace how cultural probes have been adopted and adapted by the HCI community. The flexibility of probes has been central to their uptake, resulting in a proliferation of divergent uses and derivatives. The varying patterns of adaptation of the probes reveal important underlying issues in HCI , suggesting underacknowledged disagreements about valid interpretation and the relationship between methods and their underlying methodology. With this analysis, we aim to clarify discussions around probes, and, more importantly, around how we define and evaluate methods in HCI , especially those grounded in unfamiliar conceptions of how research should be done.
Available online from: http://cemcom.infosci.cornell.edu/uploads/pubs/Boehner_Vertesi_Sengers_Dourish_Probes.pdf
Series This talk is part of the Crucible/Microsoft HCI Reading Group series.
Included in Lists
- Cambridge talks
- Crucible/Microsoft HCI Reading Group
- Hanchen DaDaDash
- Human-Computer Interaction
- Inference Group Journal Clubs
- Inference Group Summary
- Interested Talks
- Jasmine Room, Microsoft Research Cambridge
- Quantum Matter Journal Club
- rp587
- TQS Journal Clubs
- Trust & Technology Initiative - interesting events
- yk449
Note: Ex-directory lists are not shown.
![[Talks.cam]](/static/images/talkslogosmall.gif)

Alan Blackwell and Richard Harper
Thursday 07 June 2007, 11:00-12:30