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Main Authors: Hoggenmuller, Marius, Lee, Wen-Ying, Hespanhol, Luke, Jung, Malte, Tomitsch, Martin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.11133
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author Hoggenmuller, Marius
Lee, Wen-Ying
Hespanhol, Luke
Jung, Malte
Tomitsch, Martin
author_facet Hoggenmuller, Marius
Lee, Wen-Ying
Hespanhol, Luke
Jung, Malte
Tomitsch, Martin
contents In this paper, we investigate how to elicit new perspectives in research-through-design (RtD) studies through annotated portfolios. Situating the usage in human-robot interaction (HRI), we used two robotic artefacts as a case study: we first created our own annotated portfolio and subsequently ran online workshops during which we asked HRI experts to annotate our robotic artefacts. We report on the different aspects revealed about the value, use, and further improvements of the robotic artefacts through using the annotated portfolio technique ourselves versus using it with experts. We suggest that annotated portfolios - when performed by external experts - allow design researchers to obtain a form of creative and generative peer critique. Our paper offers methodological considerations for conducting expert annotation sessions. Further, we discuss the use of annotated portfolios to unveil designerly HRI knowledge in RtD studies.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2406_11133
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Eliciting New Perspectives in RtD Studies through Annotated Portfolios: A Case Study of Robotic Artefacts
Hoggenmuller, Marius
Lee, Wen-Ying
Hespanhol, Luke
Jung, Malte
Tomitsch, Martin
Human-Computer Interaction
In this paper, we investigate how to elicit new perspectives in research-through-design (RtD) studies through annotated portfolios. Situating the usage in human-robot interaction (HRI), we used two robotic artefacts as a case study: we first created our own annotated portfolio and subsequently ran online workshops during which we asked HRI experts to annotate our robotic artefacts. We report on the different aspects revealed about the value, use, and further improvements of the robotic artefacts through using the annotated portfolio technique ourselves versus using it with experts. We suggest that annotated portfolios - when performed by external experts - allow design researchers to obtain a form of creative and generative peer critique. Our paper offers methodological considerations for conducting expert annotation sessions. Further, we discuss the use of annotated portfolios to unveil designerly HRI knowledge in RtD studies.
title Eliciting New Perspectives in RtD Studies through Annotated Portfolios: A Case Study of Robotic Artefacts
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.11133