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All Outputs (25)

The Rough Mile: Testing a Framework of Immersive Practice (2017)
Conference Proceeding
Spence, J., Hazzard, A., McGrath, S., Greenhalgh, C., & Benford, S. (2017). The Rough Mile: Testing a Framework of Immersive Practice. In Proceedings of the 2017 Conference on Designing Interactive Systems - DIS '17 (877-888). https://doi.org/10.1145/3064663.3064756

We present our case study on gifting digital music, The Rough Mile, as an example of a Framework of Immersive Practice, intended for researchers and practitioners in HCI and interaction design. Although immersion is a frequently used term in the HCI... Read More about The Rough Mile: Testing a Framework of Immersive Practice.

Design fiction for mixed-reality performances (2017)
Conference Proceeding
Rostami, A., Rossitto, C., Barkhuus, L., Hook, J., Laaksolahti, J., Taylor, R., …Williamson, J. (2017). Design fiction for mixed-reality performances. In Proceedings of the 2017 CHI Conference Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems - CHI EA '17 (498-505). https://doi.org/10.1145/3027063.3027080

Designing for mixed-reality performances is challenging both in terms of technology design, and in terms of understanding the interplay between technology, narration, and (the outcomes of) audience interactions. This complexity also stems from the va... Read More about Design fiction for mixed-reality performances.

Throwaway citation of prior work creates risk of bad HCI research (2017)
Conference Proceeding
Marshall, J., Linehan, C., Spence, J., & Rennick-Egglestone, S. (2017). Throwaway citation of prior work creates risk of bad HCI research.

In CHI papers, citation of previous work is typically a shallow, throwaway action that demonstrates little critical engagement with the work cited. We present a citation context analysis of over 3000 citations from 69 papers at CHI2016, which demonst... Read More about Throwaway citation of prior work creates risk of bad HCI research.

A little respect: four case studies of HCI’s disregard for other disciplines (2017)
Conference Proceeding
Marshall, J., Linehan, C., Spence, J., & Rennick-Egglestone, S. (2017). A little respect: four case studies of HCI’s disregard for other disciplines.

HCI research often demonstrates lack of respect for other disciplines, evidenced by the way work from those disciplines are cited in CHI papers. We present 4 case studies that demonstrate; 1) that HCI researchers sometimes misunderstand and misrepres... Read More about A little respect: four case studies of HCI’s disregard for other disciplines.

Performing Research: Four contributions to HCI (2017)
Conference Proceeding
Taylor, R., Spence, J., Walker, B., Nissen, B., & Wright, P. (2017). Performing Research: Four contributions to HCI. In Proceedings of the 2017 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems - CHI '17 (4825-4837). https://doi.org/10.1145/3025453.3025751

This paper identifies a body of HCI research wherein the researchers take part in digitally mediated creative experiences alongside participants. We present our definition and rationale for "self-situated performance research" based on theories in bo... Read More about Performing Research: Four contributions to HCI.