Where The Action Is: The Foundations of Embodied Interaction
Paul Dourish
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Where the Action Is is a book by
Paul Dourish
slated for publication by
MIT Press
in October 2001.
It's topic is "embodied interaction", a novel approach to
the design of user interfaces and our interactive experience
of computation.
The idea of Embodied Interaction reflects a number of
recent trends that have emerged in the area of Human-Computer
Interaction. For instance, "tangible computing" (as conducted,
for example, by
Hiroshi Ishii
and colleagues at the
MIT Media Lab),
is an area of HCI research where people are exploring how we can move
the interface "off the screen" and into the real world. In this model,
we can interact with physical objects which have become augmented with
computational abilities. This lets designers offer new sorts of
metaphors, or take advantage of our physical skills (like being able
to use two hands, or to rearrange space to suit our needs), or even to
directly observe and respond to our physical activities in the world
(perhaps by knowing where we are and who we're with, and responding
appropriately).
A second trend is what I call "social computing," which is the
attempt to incorporate sociological understandings into interface
design. This approach to HCI design recognises that the systems we use
are embedded in systems of social meaning, fluid and negotiated
between us and the other people around us. By incorporating
understandings of how social practice emerges, we can build systems
that fit more easily into the ways in which we work.
These two areas of research -- tangible and social computing -- have
been conducted largely as independent research programs. However, I
believe that they have a common foundation, and that that foundation
is the notion of "embodiment." By embodiment, I don't mean simply
physical reality, but rather, the way that physical and social
phenomena unfold in real time and real space as a part of the world in
which we are situated, right alongside and around us.
The reason that the idea of embodiment is an important one is that it
isn't new. In fact, "embodiment" is at the centre of phenomenology, an
important strain of philosophical thought beginning at the end of the
nineteenth century. Phenomenology rejects the Cartesian separation
between mind and body on which most traditional philosophical
approaches are based. The idea of disembodied rationality,
phenomenologists argue, arises because we think about cognition only
in those immediately apparent problem cases where some problem appears
in the world that needs to be solved. This ignores 99% of our daily
lives, the mundane everyday existence in which we simply go our about
business. In place of the Cartesian model, phenomenology explores our
experiences as embodied actors interacting in the world,
participating in it and acting through it, in the absorbed and
unreflective manner of normal experience.
Since the phenomenological tradition has taken the idea of embodiment
as a central one, it seems like a good place to turn for help in
developing an understanding of the role that embodiment can play in
interactive systems. Drawing from the writings of a number of
phenomenologists, and especially from Heidegger, Schutz and
Wittgenstein, Where the Action Is develops an understanding of
embodied interaction organised in terms of the creation, manipulation
and communication of meaning, and the establishment and maintenance of
practice. Rather than embedding fixed notions of meaning within
technologies, embodied interaction is based on the understanding that
users create and communicate
meaning through their interaction with the system (and with each
other, through the system).
On the basis of this understanding, we can set out a range of design
principles that are reflected by systems exploiting embodied
interaction. This principles not only reflect important issues for
design practice, but they also provide a framework for analysing
embodied interaction in existing systems.
More Information
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What They're Saying...
"A revolution in design and the role of computer science is upon us:
"Where the Action Is" describes the way. In the old days, the focus
was upon the technology and "computing," hence the interest is the
interface between humans and machines -- us versus them. Not
anymore. As Dourish so cogently explains, design should not be
about tasks and their requirements, or applications, or computing
-- design is really about interaction, with a focus on ubiquity,
tangibility, and most of all, shared awareness, intimacy, and
emotions. This is a revolution badly needed: It's about time."
"Human-computer interaction meets philosophical treatments of
embodiment. The result: a foundational study of living and acting in
a wired world. And a rare achievement too: a readable and engaging
book which manages to be both sensible and groundbreaking at the same
time."
"Where the Action Is provides intellectual foundations for the
emerging movement that makes people, and not machines, central to the
process of design. With a clarity and thoughtfulness that make hard
ideas easy, Paul Dourish's book will only increase in importance as
the social nature of computing becomes evident to a new generation of
technologists."
"This is the first book to provide a broad view of how our interaction
with computers is intertwined with our physical world. Dourish gives
a wealth of examples of innovations in computer technologies, along
with a deep grounding in the philosophical, psychological, and
sociological issues and theories. The book is unique in combining
great breadth of intellectual underpinnings with a clear explanation
that elucidates the relationships between the fields without falling
prey to the jargon of either. Everyone interested in seeing where
computer interaction is leading us in the coming century will benefit
from the wide view and clear perspective that Dourish presents."
"In this beautifully written book, Paul Dourish synthesizes conceptual
resources drawn from across the humanities, social and computing
sciences, in a way that is generative for our thinking about
human/artifact relations. He surveys an intellectual terrain that
provides both theoretical and practical support for new forms of
engagement across the disciplines, and with the objects of creative
technical practice. This book will be a resource not only for
designers in human-computer interaction and computer-supported
cooperative work but also for scholars of science and technology
interested in understanding those worlds from a deeply insightful,
reflective practitioner's point of view."
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