Fr. 70.00

Digital Make-Believe

English · Hardback

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Description

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Make-believe plays a far stronger role in both the design and use of interfaces, games and services than we have come to believe. This edited volume illustrates ways for grasping and utilising that connection to improve interaction, user experiences, and customer value. Useful for designers, undergraduates and researchers alike, this new research provide tools for understanding and applying make-believe in various contexts, ranging from digital tools to physical services. It takes the reader through a world of imagination and intuition applied into efficient practice, with topics including the connection of human-computer interaction (HCI) to make-believe and backstories, the presence of imagination in gamification, gameworlds, virtual worlds and service design, and the believability of make-believe based designs in various contexts. Furthermore, it discusses the challenges inherent in applying make-believe as a basis for interaction design, as well as the enactive mechanism behindit.
Whether used as a university textbook or simply used for design inspiration, Digital Make-Believe provides new and efficient insight into approaching interaction in the way in which actual users of devices, software and services can innately utilise it.

List of contents

Introduction.- A Narrative for HCI.- Make-Believing Virtual Realities.- Fiction for Design.- Service Design Methods in Interaction Design.- Gameworld Interfaces as Make-Believe.- Make-Believe in Gameful and Playful Design.- The Role of Make-Believe in Foley.- Enactive Mechanism of Make-Believe Games.- Immanent Storyworlds.

About the author

Phil Turner is a reader in the School of Computing at Edinburgh Napier University, and research leader of the Make-Believe group. J. Tuomas Harviainen is a Development Manager for the city of Vantaa, Finland and a postdoctoral researcher at Hanken School of Economics. He currently focuses especially on the organizational learning aspects of games, but often ventures into service design, management, information systems, or sexology. He is also one of the three editors of the journal Simulation & Gaming.

Summary

Make-believe plays a far stronger role in both the design and use of interfaces, games and services than we have come to believe. This edited volume illustrates ways for grasping and utilising that connection to improve interaction, user experiences, and customer value. Useful for designers, undergraduates and researchers alike, this new research provide tools for understanding and applying make-believe in various contexts, ranging from digital tools to physical services. It takes the reader through a world of imagination and intuition applied into efficient practice, with topics including the connection of human-computer interaction (HCI) to make-believe and backstories, the presence of imagination in gamification, gameworlds, virtual worlds and service design, and the believability of make-believe based designs in various contexts. Furthermore, it discusses the challenges inherent in applying make-believe as a basis for interaction design, as well as the enactive mechanism behindit.
Whether used as a university textbook or simply used for design inspiration, Digital Make-Believe provides new and efficient insight into approaching interaction in the way in which actual users of devices, software and services can innately utilise it.

Product details

Assisted by J. Tuomas Harviainen (Editor), Phil Turner (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 10.05.2016
 
EAN 9783319295510
ISBN 978-3-31-929551-0
No. of pages 178
Dimensions 160 mm x 240 mm x 15 mm
Weight 434 g
Illustrations VIII, 178 p. 20 illus.
Series Human-Computer Interaction Series
Human–Computer Interaction Series
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > IT, data processing > Operating systems, user interfaces

B, Graphic Design, computer science, Interaction Design, Computer simulation, Computer modelling & simulation, Simulation and Modeling, Human–computer interaction, User interface design & usability, User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction, User interfaces (Computer systems)

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