Data-Enabled Design for Social Change: Two Case Studies
Smartness in contemporary society implies the use of massive data to improve the experience of people with connected services and products. The use of big data to collect information about people’s behaviours opens a new concept of “user-centred design” where users are remotely monitored, observed a...
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doaj-d359b713cbec410aa1a0fe2cb4cddb7f2020-11-25T00:15:20ZengMDPI AGFuture Internet1999-59032016-09-01844610.3390/fi8040046fi8040046Data-Enabled Design for Social Change: Two Case StudiesPatrizia Marti0Carl Megens1Caroline Hummels2Department of Social, Political and Cognitive Science, University of Siena, Siena 53100, ItalyDepartment of Industrial Design, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven 5600 MB, The NetherlandsDepartment of Industrial Design, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven 5600 MB, The NetherlandsSmartness in contemporary society implies the use of massive data to improve the experience of people with connected services and products. The use of big data to collect information about people’s behaviours opens a new concept of “user-centred design” where users are remotely monitored, observed and profiled. In this paradigm, users are considered as sources of information and their participation in the design process is limited to a role of data generators. There is a need to identify methodologies that actively involve people and communities at the core of ecosystems of interconnected products and services. Our contribution to designing for social innovation in ecosystems relies on developing new methods and approaches to transform data-driven design using a participatory and co-creative data-enabled design approach. To this end, we present one of the methods we have developed to design “smart” systems called Experiential Design Landscapes (EDL), and two sample projects, Social Stairs and [Y]our Perspective. Social Stairs faces the topic of behaviour change mediated by sensing technologies. [Y]our Perspective is a social platform to sustain processes of deliberative democracy. Both projects exemplify our approach to data-enabled design as a social proactive participatory design approach.http://www.mdpi.com/1999-5903/8/4/46data-enabled designparticipatory designco-creationsmart systemsbehaviour changedeliberative democracy |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Patrizia Marti Carl Megens Caroline Hummels |
spellingShingle |
Patrizia Marti Carl Megens Caroline Hummels Data-Enabled Design for Social Change: Two Case Studies Future Internet data-enabled design participatory design co-creation smart systems behaviour change deliberative democracy |
author_facet |
Patrizia Marti Carl Megens Caroline Hummels |
author_sort |
Patrizia Marti |
title |
Data-Enabled Design for Social Change: Two Case Studies |
title_short |
Data-Enabled Design for Social Change: Two Case Studies |
title_full |
Data-Enabled Design for Social Change: Two Case Studies |
title_fullStr |
Data-Enabled Design for Social Change: Two Case Studies |
title_full_unstemmed |
Data-Enabled Design for Social Change: Two Case Studies |
title_sort |
data-enabled design for social change: two case studies |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Future Internet |
issn |
1999-5903 |
publishDate |
2016-09-01 |
description |
Smartness in contemporary society implies the use of massive data to improve the experience of people with connected services and products. The use of big data to collect information about people’s behaviours opens a new concept of “user-centred design” where users are remotely monitored, observed and profiled. In this paradigm, users are considered as sources of information and their participation in the design process is limited to a role of data generators. There is a need to identify methodologies that actively involve people and communities at the core of ecosystems of interconnected products and services. Our contribution to designing for social innovation in ecosystems relies on developing new methods and approaches to transform data-driven design using a participatory and co-creative data-enabled design approach. To this end, we present one of the methods we have developed to design “smart” systems called Experiential Design Landscapes (EDL), and two sample projects, Social Stairs and [Y]our Perspective. Social Stairs faces the topic of behaviour change mediated by sensing technologies. [Y]our Perspective is a social platform to sustain processes of deliberative democracy. Both projects exemplify our approach to data-enabled design as a social proactive participatory design approach. |
topic |
data-enabled design participatory design co-creation smart systems behaviour change deliberative democracy |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/1999-5903/8/4/46 |
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