Matching Items (2)
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Description
Within the field of Human-Computer Interaction, researchers and designers have increasingly focused on collaborating with users across the design process. Researchers have explored various approaches to stakeholder engagement such as providing feedback on design concepts, need finding, envisioning, and prototype evaluation. Collaborative design as a method brings together individuals from

Within the field of Human-Computer Interaction, researchers and designers have increasingly focused on collaborating with users across the design process. Researchers have explored various approaches to stakeholder engagement such as providing feedback on design concepts, need finding, envisioning, and prototype evaluation. Collaborative design as a method brings together individuals from various disciplines, backgrounds, and areas of expertise to co-create and ideate on current and developing technologies or experiences. These insights from community members are essential in creating and effectively implementing designs in different contexts and communities. This dissertation aims to expand the current scope of collaborative design methods within the field of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) by implementing design fiction techniques to inspire future-oriented ideation. By integrating storytelling and crowd-driven ideation within collaborative design methods, participants can ideate beyond what is currently feasible and communicate their desires and needs within their community. This research also utilizes two online platforms to support my collaborative design methods: Dream Drone and The Dream Collective. These platforms, inspired by creativity support tools, enable stakeholders to envision, re-mix, and iterate upon future products, spaces, and services at a larger scale. I present my research focusing on using and expanding collaborative design methodologies within two different time frames. The first examines different methods to collaborate with local communities through workshops that aim to inspire actionable design interventions within shorter time frames (e.g., iteration over the course of a year). The second explores incorporating design fiction methods within co-design to inspire participants, both in person and online at scale, to envision future designs and their potential applications in the upcoming 5-20 years. Through these explorations I highlight the broader implications of utilizing collaborative design methodologies, augmented by design fiction, and online creativity support tools, to inform design.
ContributorsRodriguez Vega, Alejandra (Author) / Kuznetsov, Stacey (Thesis advisor) / Spackman, Christy (Committee member) / Bauer, DB (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
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Description
The current push towards integrating new digital fabrication techniques into all parts of daily life has raised concerns about the changing role of the craftsperson in creative making. The goal of this dissertation is to gain insight into how new technologies can be incorporated into creative practices in a way

The current push towards integrating new digital fabrication techniques into all parts of daily life has raised concerns about the changing role of the craftsperson in creative making. The goal of this dissertation is to gain insight into how new technologies can be incorporated into creative practices in a way that effectively supports the goals and workflows of practitioners. To do so, I explore three different cases in which 3D printing, a tool by which complex 3D objects are fabricated from digital designs, is used in tandem with traditional creative practices. Each project focuses on a different way to incorporate 3D printed objects, whether it be as a visualization for artists’ processes, a substitute medium for finished artworks, or as a step toward a larger fabrication workflow. Through this research, I discover how the integration of 3D printing affects creative processes, explore how these changes influence how and why practitioners engage in artistic practices, and gain insight into directions for future technological innovations.
ContributorsWeiler, Jennifer Joyce (Author) / Ingalls, Todd (Thesis advisor) / Kuznetsov, Stacey (Thesis advisor) / Neubauer, Mary B (Committee member) / Nam, Hye Y (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020