Rhythms of the Domestic Soundscape: Ethnomethodological Soundwalks for Phatic Technology Design - Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2013
Conference Papers Year : 2013

Rhythms of the Domestic Soundscape: Ethnomethodological Soundwalks for Phatic Technology Design

Hanif Baharin
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1006505
Sean Rintel
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1006506
Stephen Viller
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1006507

Abstract

The importance of the domestic soundscape as a context for technological interventions has received little attention in HCI research. In this paper, we discuss how an ethnomethodological soundwalk method facilitated design principles for a phatic technology probe for seniors living alone. Taking soundscape concepts as a starting point, we suggest that the soundwalk works much like a breaching experiment, changing the participant’s role in engaging with their soundscape from reactive automatic agent to proactive reflective agent. This enables participants to reveal their own systematic orderliness when accounting for everyday sounds. We find that sounds are accounted for in terms of people placed in narratives. As such, we argue that phatic technologies use new sounds and rhythms to augment the domestic soundscape to take advantage of people’s abilities to create social narratives from limited cues.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
978-3-642-40498-6_36_Chapter.pdf (47.9 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Origin Files produced by the author(s)
Loading...

Dates and versions

hal-01510519 , version 1 (19-04-2017)

Licence

Identifiers

Cite

Hanif Baharin, Sean Rintel, Stephen Viller. Rhythms of the Domestic Soundscape: Ethnomethodological Soundwalks for Phatic Technology Design. 14th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (INTERACT), Sep 2013, Cape Town, South Africa. pp.463-470, ⟨10.1007/978-3-642-40498-6_36⟩. ⟨hal-01510519⟩
64 View
124 Download

Altmetric

Share

More