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Main Authors: Lukoff, Kai, Zhang, Xinqi
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.09010
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author Lukoff, Kai
Zhang, Xinqi
author_facet Lukoff, Kai
Zhang, Xinqi
contents Community empowerment is the process of enabling communities to increase control over their narratives, resources, and futures. In HCI and design, this social challenge centers on helping marginalized groups gain agency through technology and design interventions. For Indigenous communities in particular, empowerment means not only representation but sovereignty in how their stories are told and by whom. Location-based augmented reality (AR) offers a novel opportunity to address this challenge. By overlaying digital content onto physical places, AR can spatially anchor community narratives in the real world, allowing communities to re-tell the story of a place on their own terms. Such site-specific AR experiences have already been used to reveal hidden histories, re-imagine colonial monuments, and celebrate minority cultures. The affordances of XR - particularly ARś spatial interaction and immersive storytelling - make it a promising tool for cultural continuity and community activism. In this position paper, we focus on how these XR affordances can empower communities, using the Thámien Ohlone AR Tour as a case study. We outline why traditional digital interventions fall short of true empowerment, how AR's immersive qualities uniquely support Indigenous self-determination, insights from co-designing the Ohlone AR Tour, and future directions to scale such efforts responsibly.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2504_09010
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Community Empowerment through Location-Based AR: The Thámien Ohlone AR Tour
Lukoff, Kai
Zhang, Xinqi
Human-Computer Interaction
J.5
Community empowerment is the process of enabling communities to increase control over their narratives, resources, and futures. In HCI and design, this social challenge centers on helping marginalized groups gain agency through technology and design interventions. For Indigenous communities in particular, empowerment means not only representation but sovereignty in how their stories are told and by whom. Location-based augmented reality (AR) offers a novel opportunity to address this challenge. By overlaying digital content onto physical places, AR can spatially anchor community narratives in the real world, allowing communities to re-tell the story of a place on their own terms. Such site-specific AR experiences have already been used to reveal hidden histories, re-imagine colonial monuments, and celebrate minority cultures. The affordances of XR - particularly ARś spatial interaction and immersive storytelling - make it a promising tool for cultural continuity and community activism. In this position paper, we focus on how these XR affordances can empower communities, using the Thámien Ohlone AR Tour as a case study. We outline why traditional digital interventions fall short of true empowerment, how AR's immersive qualities uniquely support Indigenous self-determination, insights from co-designing the Ohlone AR Tour, and future directions to scale such efforts responsibly.
title Community Empowerment through Location-Based AR: The Thámien Ohlone AR Tour
topic Human-Computer Interaction
J.5
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.09010