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Artifact

Volume 1, Issue 3, 2007

SHOW AND TELL: ACCESSING AND COMMUNICATING IMPLICIT KNOWLEDGE THROUGH ARTEFACTS

SHOW AND TELL: ACCESSING AND COMMUNICATING IMPLICIT KNOWLEDGE THROUGH ARTEFACTS

DOI:
10.1080/17493460701800207
Yoko Akamaac*, Roslyn Cooperbc, Laurene Vaughanac, Stephen Villerbc, Matthew Simpsonbc & Jeremy Yuilleac

pages 172-181

Available online: 03 Mar 2008

Abstract

This paper contributes to the current discourse on the role of artefacts in facilitating and triggering interaction among people. The discussion will focus on artefacts used as part of an interview method developed in order to discover knowledge that was observed but absent from both project reports and other documentation within multidisciplinary collaborative research projects, located within the field of Interaction Design. Using artefacts in an interview context enabled participants to reveal insights that were, in turn, participatory and human-centred. Thus the method was effective and appropriate in illuminating knowledge situated in interaction. This ethnomethodological tool enabled participants to reflexively externalize their understanding of the complex interactions that occur within projects, encouraging participation, interaction, visualization, reflection and communication through the use of tools aimed at capturing and illuminating the lived experiences of human engagement. These interviews were conducted with a selection of participants, chosen because they were researchers, working together within a cooperative research centre.

Keywords

 

Details

  • Available online: 03 Mar 2008

Author affiliations

  • a RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia
  • b The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
  • c Australian CRC for Interaction Design (ACID), Kelvin Grove, Australia

Librarians

Taylor & Francis Group