As we manoeuvre through life we often try to predict other people’s behaviors and feelings; sometimes even our own. A classical take on the matter is to refer to character traits. But there is another source of information we may tap for our predictions - highly relevant and still often overlooked: knowledge of where the person is. At what place? In which context? This article invites you on a journey of thinking about and exploring the marvellous impacts of places. We will start by visiting personality psychology, attending the quest of its professionals for ever-better behavior predictions. Subsequently, we will witness an experiment on the importance of places - seeing how a place setup may propel forcefully, almost mercilessly towards innovations.We will then browse personality psychology and other fields in search of fast and easy ways to make sense of places: How are they going to affect us? Who are we going to be there? Finally, we will draw together what we have found and construct a scheme to analyze or design places - which, of course, needs to be put to the test….
CITATION STYLE
von Thienen, J., Noweski, C., Rauth, I., Meinel, C., & Lang, S. (2012). If you want to know who you are, tell me where you are: The importance of places. In Design Thinking Research: Studying Co-Creation in Practice (pp. 53–73). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-21643-5_4
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