Making from Home: Reflections on Crafting Tangible Interfaces for Stay-at-home Living

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Abstract

Pandemic lockdowns created new barriers for HCI researchers, but also provided new opportunities for deeper engagement and reflection in our home environments. Five participants were introduced with a design brief on self-isolation and engaged 12 of their friends and family in the design process of in-the-isolated-wild deployments. By analysing the design process, we found that -while gmaking from home'- our participants noticed the subtlety of the interactions and materials, the processes of remembrance embedded in craft, the use of imperfection and metaphor in homeware, and how ambient presence can provide emotional support. We then conducted a follow-up study on the benefits and limitations of using a crafting approach while gmaking from home' and discuss the tensions that novices experience while designing TUIs in such an environment. Our results expand the literature by highlighting the benefits, limitations, and trade-offs of user-led design, DIY user empowerment, and harnessing the power of craft.

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APA

Jones, L., Nousir, A., Chen, R. X., Liu, A., Donovan, M., Wallace, E., & Nabil, S. (2023). Making from Home: Reflections on Crafting Tangible Interfaces for Stay-at-home Living. In ACM International Conference Proceeding Series. Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3569009.3572744

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