Toward a Theory for the Design of Human Technologies

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Toward a Theory for the Design of Human Technologies. / Simonsen, Jesper; Hertzum, Morten; Nielsen, Jørgen Lerche; Riis, Søren.

OzCHI '14 Proceedings of the 26th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: the Future of Design . Association for Computing Machinery, 2014. p. 444-447 (Australasian Computer Human Interaction Conference. Proceedings).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Simonsen, J, Hertzum, M, Nielsen, JL & Riis, S 2014, Toward a Theory for the Design of Human Technologies. in OzCHI '14 Proceedings of the 26th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: the Future of Design . Association for Computing Machinery, Australasian Computer Human Interaction Conference. Proceedings, pp. 444-447. https://doi.org/10.1145/2686612.2686682

APA

Simonsen, J., Hertzum, M., Nielsen, J. L., & Riis, S. (2014). Toward a Theory for the Design of Human Technologies. In OzCHI '14 Proceedings of the 26th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: the Future of Design (pp. 444-447). Association for Computing Machinery. Australasian Computer Human Interaction Conference. Proceedings https://doi.org/10.1145/2686612.2686682

Vancouver

Simonsen J, Hertzum M, Nielsen JL, Riis S. Toward a Theory for the Design of Human Technologies. In OzCHI '14 Proceedings of the 26th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: the Future of Design . Association for Computing Machinery. 2014. p. 444-447. (Australasian Computer Human Interaction Conference. Proceedings). https://doi.org/10.1145/2686612.2686682

Author

Simonsen, Jesper ; Hertzum, Morten ; Nielsen, Jørgen Lerche ; Riis, Søren. / Toward a Theory for the Design of Human Technologies. OzCHI '14 Proceedings of the 26th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: the Future of Design . Association for Computing Machinery, 2014. pp. 444-447 (Australasian Computer Human Interaction Conference. Proceedings).

Bibtex

@inproceedings{3a90afdcbda34018880a0a0e59b97387,
title = "Toward a Theory for the Design of Human Technologies",
abstract = "Design is increasingly becoming a part of the university curriculum and research agenda. A theory about the pro-cess and practice of design might be important to estab-lish design as a main subject at universities. We believe it is in the interest of many design communities – not least the Participatory Design (PD) community – to engage in theorizing design, on the basis of our understanding of design and design practices. This theory could be posi-tioned as an alternative to other attempts to theorize design, for example the influential efforts of the Information Systems (IS) community. We urge the PD community to engage in collective theory building, and we present a framework intended to support our shared reflections on the design of human technologies.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Design, theory, epistemology, framework",
author = "Jesper Simonsen and Morten Hertzum and Nielsen, {J{\o}rgen Lerche} and S{\o}ren Riis",
note = "OzCHI '14 Proceedings of the 26th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: the Future of Design ISBN: 978-1-4503-0653-9",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1145/2686612.2686682",
language = "English",
series = "Australasian Computer Human Interaction Conference. Proceedings",
pages = "444--447",
booktitle = "OzCHI '14 Proceedings of the 26th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: the Future of Design",
publisher = "Association for Computing Machinery",

}

RIS

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AU - Simonsen, Jesper

AU - Hertzum, Morten

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PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Design is increasingly becoming a part of the university curriculum and research agenda. A theory about the pro-cess and practice of design might be important to estab-lish design as a main subject at universities. We believe it is in the interest of many design communities – not least the Participatory Design (PD) community – to engage in theorizing design, on the basis of our understanding of design and design practices. This theory could be posi-tioned as an alternative to other attempts to theorize design, for example the influential efforts of the Information Systems (IS) community. We urge the PD community to engage in collective theory building, and we present a framework intended to support our shared reflections on the design of human technologies.

AB - Design is increasingly becoming a part of the university curriculum and research agenda. A theory about the pro-cess and practice of design might be important to estab-lish design as a main subject at universities. We believe it is in the interest of many design communities – not least the Participatory Design (PD) community – to engage in theorizing design, on the basis of our understanding of design and design practices. This theory could be posi-tioned as an alternative to other attempts to theorize design, for example the influential efforts of the Information Systems (IS) community. We urge the PD community to engage in collective theory building, and we present a framework intended to support our shared reflections on the design of human technologies.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Design

KW - theory

KW - epistemology

KW - framework

U2 - 10.1145/2686612.2686682

DO - 10.1145/2686612.2686682

M3 - Article in proceedings

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EP - 447

BT - OzCHI '14 Proceedings of the 26th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: the Future of Design

PB - Association for Computing Machinery

ER -

ID: 138764949