Fr. 134.00

Configuring User-Designer Relations - Interdisciplinary Perspectives

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 2 to 3 weeks (title will be printed to order)

Description

Read more

'User-designer relations' concerns the sorts of working relationships that arise between developers and end users of IT products - the different ways designers of IT products seek to engage with users, and the ways users seek to influence product design. It is through the shifting patterns of these relations that IT products are realised. Although it has generally been accepted that achieving better user-designer relations will improve the quality of IT products, there has been little consensus on how this might be achieved.
This book aims to deepen our understanding of the relationships between users and designers both as they emerge in the wild and as a consequence of our attempts to intervene. Through a series of case studies the book juxtaposes in-depth explorations of different perspectives and approaches to thinking about - and doing - user-designer relations, considering important implications for design and computer science more generally.

List of contents

Introduction: Configuring User-Designer Relations: Interdisciplinary Perspectives.- Participatory Design: Issues and Approaches in Dynamic Constellations of Use, Design, and Research.- Design as and for Collaboration: Making Sense of and Supporting Practical Action.- User-Designer Relations in Technology Production: The Development and Evaluation of an 'Animator' Tool to Facilitate User Involvement in the Development of Electronic Health Records.- Lessons Learnt in Providing Product Designers with User-Participatory Interaction Design Tools.- A Break from Novelty: Persistence and Effects of Structural Tensions in User-Designer Relations.- Practicalities of Participation: Stakeholder Involvement in an Electronic Patient Records Project.- Bottom-up, Top-down? Connecting Software Architecture Design with Use.- Global Software and its Provenance: Generification Work in the Production of Organisational Software Packages.- Concluding Remarks.

Summary

‘User-designer relations’ concerns the sorts of working relationships that arise between developers and end users of IT products - the different ways designers of IT products seek to engage with users, and the ways users seek to influence product design. It is through the shifting patterns of these relations that IT products are realised. Although it has generally been accepted that achieving better user-designer relations will improve the quality of IT products, there has been little consensus on how this might be achieved.
This book aims to deepen our understanding of the relationships between users and designers both as they emerge in the wild and as a consequence of our attempts to intervene. Through a series of case studies the book juxtaposes in-depth explorations of different perspectives and approaches to thinking about - and doing - user-designer relations, considering important implications for design and computer science more generally.

Product details

Assisted by Monika Buscher (Editor), Monika Büscher (Editor), Mar Hartswood (Editor), Mark Hartswood (Editor), Rob Procter (Editor), Rob Procter et al (Editor), Mark Rouncefield (Editor), Roger Slack (Editor), Roger S. Slack (Editor), Alex Voss (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 14.04.2009
 
EAN 9781846289248
ISBN 978-1-84628-924-8
No. of pages 246
Dimensions 161 mm x 17 mm x 242 mm
Weight 350 g
Illustrations XVI, 246 p.
Series Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > IT, data processing > Operating systems, user interfaces

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.