Emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software

In my teaching and software development practice, I realized that most applications with human-computer interaction do not respond to usersâ emotional needs. The dualism of reason and emotion as two fairly opposite entities that dominated Western philosophy was also reflected in software design. C...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gutica, Mirela
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
HCI
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2863
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-28632018-01-05T17:23:09Z Emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software Gutica, Mirela Educational software HCI Usability Affective computing Emotional design User modeling Mixed research methods In my teaching and software development practice, I realized that most applications with human-computer interaction do not respond to usersâ emotional needs. The dualism of reason and emotion as two fairly opposite entities that dominated Western philosophy was also reflected in software design. Computing was originally intended to provide applications for military and industrial activities and was primarily associated with cognition and rationality. Today, more and more computer applications interact with users in very complex and sophisticated ways. In human-computer interaction, attention is given to issues of usability and user modeling, but techniques to emotionally engage users or respond to their emotional needs have not been fully developed, even as specialists like Klein, Norman and Picard argued that machines that recognize and express emotions respond better and more appropriately to user interaction (Picard, 1997; Picard & Klein, 2002; Norman, 2004). This study investigated emotion from designersâ perspectives and tentatively concludes that there is little awareness and involvement in emotional design in the IT community. By contrast, participants in this study (36 IT specialists from various fields) strongly supported the idea of emotional design and confirmed the need for methodologies and theoretical models to research emotional design. Based on a review of theory, surveys and interviews, I identified a set of themes for heuristics of emotional design and recommended future research directions. Attention was given to consequences; participants in this study raised issues of manipulation, ethical responsibilities of designers, and the need for regulations, and recommended that emotional design should carry standard ethical guidelines for games and any other applications. The research design utilized a mixed QUAN-qual methodological model proposed by Creswell (2003) and Gay, Mills, and Airasian (2006), which was modified to equally emphasize both quantitative and qualitative stages. An instrument in the form of a questionnaire was designed, tested and piloted in this study and will be improved and used in future research. Education, Faculty of Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of Graduate 2008-12-09T20:27:34Z 2008-12-09T20:27:34Z 2008 2008-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2863 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 4063478 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Educational software
HCI
Usability
Affective computing
Emotional design
User modeling
Mixed research methods
spellingShingle Educational software
HCI
Usability
Affective computing
Emotional design
User modeling
Mixed research methods
Gutica, Mirela
Emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software
description In my teaching and software development practice, I realized that most applications with human-computer interaction do not respond to usersâ emotional needs. The dualism of reason and emotion as two fairly opposite entities that dominated Western philosophy was also reflected in software design. Computing was originally intended to provide applications for military and industrial activities and was primarily associated with cognition and rationality. Today, more and more computer applications interact with users in very complex and sophisticated ways. In human-computer interaction, attention is given to issues of usability and user modeling, but techniques to emotionally engage users or respond to their emotional needs have not been fully developed, even as specialists like Klein, Norman and Picard argued that machines that recognize and express emotions respond better and more appropriately to user interaction (Picard, 1997; Picard & Klein, 2002; Norman, 2004). This study investigated emotion from designersâ perspectives and tentatively concludes that there is little awareness and involvement in emotional design in the IT community. By contrast, participants in this study (36 IT specialists from various fields) strongly supported the idea of emotional design and confirmed the need for methodologies and theoretical models to research emotional design. Based on a review of theory, surveys and interviews, I identified a set of themes for heuristics of emotional design and recommended future research directions. Attention was given to consequences; participants in this study raised issues of manipulation, ethical responsibilities of designers, and the need for regulations, and recommended that emotional design should carry standard ethical guidelines for games and any other applications. The research design utilized a mixed QUAN-qual methodological model proposed by Creswell (2003) and Gay, Mills, and Airasian (2006), which was modified to equally emphasize both quantitative and qualitative stages. An instrument in the form of a questionnaire was designed, tested and piloted in this study and will be improved and used in future research. === Education, Faculty of === Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of === Graduate
author Gutica, Mirela
author_facet Gutica, Mirela
author_sort Gutica, Mirela
title Emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software
title_short Emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software
title_full Emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software
title_fullStr Emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software
title_full_unstemmed Emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software
title_sort emotional design : an investigation into designers' perceptions of incorporating emotions in software
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2863
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