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Processes of Design Sixth lecture: Ethnography 27 October 2003

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Title: Processes of Design Sixth lecture: Ethnography 27 October 2003


1
Processes of DesignSixth lectureEthnography
27 October 2003
  • William Newman

2
Evaluation Revisiting the Problem
  • We must simulate the end result
  • We have particular problems
  • Simulating the user
  • Simulating the context
  • Simulating how the user performs the task
  • Ethnography helps us understand these better
  • This is my view of the What and How of
    Ethnography.

3
What Is Ethnography?
  • Fieldwork methods for the study and analysis of
    social settings
  • Draws on methods used in studies of primates and
    primitive tribes
  • A research activity, increasing our knowledge of
    the social world
  • Links with philosophy rather than scientific
    theory.

4
How Computer Research discovered Ethnography
  • Jeff Rulifsons Office Research Group at Xerox
    PARC
  • Recruiting anthropologists to study office
    workers
  • Advanced Systems Dept (1978-80) Altos in the
    White House
  • Lucy Suchman and Situated Action.

5
Work Practice and Technology Research at PARC
1980-2000
  • Practical ethnography and design participation
  • San Jose Airport studyThe Flight Tracker example
  • Orrs study of service techniciansWar stories
    as teaching materials
  • The Denver ProjectConnecting service techs by
    radio
  • Ethnographic studies continue at PARC (Jack and
    Marilyn Whalen).

6
Ethnography in Europe
  • Wes Sharrock (Manchester Univ.)
  • Lancaster Univ.s Sociology Dept.
  • Scandinavian participative design research
    (Susanne Bodker)
  • Xerox Cambridge from pure HCI to Sociology and
    Ethnography (Richard Harper)
  • The Xerox IMF study.

7
Responsibility Modelling
  • Why are systems accepted by their users, and
    other rejected?
  • Rejection of an air traffic control workstation
  • IMF Economic Database failure
  • Question What matters most to workers?
  • Hypothesis Whatever makes them effective team
    members, and reduces the risk of being fired.
  • I.e. meeting their responsibilities
  • But is it valid to make predictions based on
    studies of social behaviour?

8
Ethnomethodology (EMy)
  • A long word about studying small-scale social
    action
  • Concerned with everyday socialaction and its
    production of order
  • Origins in Conversation Analysis
  • Examples
  • Gaze and speech interruption
  • Patients design of pain cries
  • The 10-second free turn in medical consultations.

9
EMys limitations
  • Looks at fine detail -- influences only the file
    detail (UI) of design
  • Invalidity of generalizing about social action
  • Generalizing therefore falls on the designer
  • EMists dont build on each others work -- they
    prefer to demolish it!
  • So theres work to be done.

10
Summary Ethnographic study methods
  • Direct observation
  • Interview
  • Video and/or audio recording
  • Diary-keeping
  • Also participation and action research

11
Informing design
  • The correct approach
  • Ethnographer conducts studies
  • Ethnographer relates findings to designers
  • Designers come back with questions
  • Ethnographer does further studies, etc.
  • The field usability testing approach
  • Ship the product or prototype
  • Find a study site
  • Gather data about design faults, report back
  • Can we do better?
  • The diary study option.

12
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