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HCC class lecture 19 comments

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Title: HCC class lecture 19 comments


1
HCC classlecture 19 comments
John Canny4/4/05
2
Administrivia
  • No class on Wednesday CHI
  • Social networks (next reading) should be online
    Friday.

3
Knowledge Ecologies
  • Sometimes bundled as part of Actor-Network
    Theory, draws on a similar tradition to Latour
    anthropological and sociological studies of
    science.
  • The ecology metaphor is used by Susan
    Leigh-Star, Bonnie Nardi and Vicky ODay. A
    different emphasis from Latour more concern
    about social groups (communities of practice),
    centers of power and the boundaries between them.
  • Another key figure in this line of research is
    Donna Haraway, author of A Cyborg Manifesto.

4
Immutable Mobiles
  • Kinds of artifacts that convey essentially the
    same meaning independent of context
  • Maps
  • Math equations
  • Charts, graphs etc.
  • Far more prevalent in science than in other
    realms of human endeavor.
  • They dont require knowledge of the writers
    context or background, as do novels or many other
    texts.

5
Immutable Mobiles
  • Semiotics introduced a number of concepts to
    think about immutable mobiles. These include
  • Realism the philosophical perspective that
    things exist in the world independent of words.
  • Modality the degree of truth or reality of a
    sign. I.M.s are at the extreme end of realism
    the signifier is supposed to unambiguously denote
    the thing.
  • Readerly (vs. Writerly) texts the meaning of the
    text is clear to the reader.
  • The discussion of modality explicitly separated
    the map from the territory. So does Piagets
    work there is a specific stage when children
    understand how to navigate the neighborhood
    first-hand, but not using a map.

6
Layered Representations
  • Seems to mirror Latours idea of black boxes
  • The representations are exposed as one opens up
    the boxes.
  • Some are opaque (unopened), while others are
    exposed.

7
Formalism and Distance
  • Stars focus is on what happens at a distance, as
    immutable mobiles cross social boundaries.
  • As we saw with Wengers readings, many objects
    intended as immutable mobiles, such as
    insurance claim forms, are anything but that.
    The desire for formalism apparently faces
    insurmountable obstacles.
  • Fortunately, there are still people in the loop
    to figure out what to do.

8
Formalism and Distance
  • Any push towards greater formalism should be
    matched by a greater understanding of the group
    work context.
  • i.e. in order to make mobiles really mobile,
    one must understand the resources and conventions
    at the likely sources and destinations.

9
Freezing Representations
  • In reality, the layered representations used in a
    complex organization tend to move by themselves.
  • A natural strategy to force stability is to
    freeze various parts of the representation with
    specifications or standards.
  • Put another way, design is about making
    progressive commitments. In practice these
    commitments are not made top-down, or bottom-up,
    but at arbitrary levels driven by all the
    constraints in the system.

10
Boundary Objects
  • Boundary objects are artifacts that mediate the
    interaction between different work-groups, or
    communities of practice.
  • Rather than spanning time and space arbitrarily
    (as immutable mobiles), they mediate between
    specific communities.
  • But otherwise they share similar properties. In
    general, the more concrete they are, the
    better.

11
Brokering
  • Boundary objects, as the term suggests, are
    objects.
  • Boundaries can also be mediated by people, called
    brokers. These people speak the language of
    two or more communities, and it is understood
    that their role includes mediation between them.
  • Brokering is a complex role which involves
    reconciling perspectives and philosophies. It is
    a difficult political space since the foci of
    power are in centers of discipline or
    perspective.

12
Brokering
  • Brokers are often in a difficult situation since
    they must represent the views of a conflicting or
    a competing group, but must avoid taking sides.
  • Brokers often form communities of practice of
    their own to address these issues.

13
Discussion Topics
  • T1 List some boundary objects that you routinely
    work with. What are the communities between which
    these objects mediate? Are there brokers as well?
  • T2 Suppose you wanted to identify boundary
    objects or brokers computationally. What kind of
    data would you need, and what would you do with
    it?
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