SOCIAL INTERACTION AND MUNDANE TECHNOLOGIES WORKSHOP - DIGITAL DOCUMENTS OF LIFE, PHOTO SHARING AND MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGIES IN EVERYDAY LIFE http://www.mundanetechnologies.com/goings-on/workshop/melbourne/ ---------------------------------------------------------------- Workshop on Social Interaction and Mundane Technologies (simtech workshop), University of Melbourne, 26th - 27th November, funded by European Microsoft Research Fellowship. - Contributions in the form of 4 page position papers (ACM SIG format) are invited for a one and a half day workshop at the University of Melbourne, Australia. - Deadline for submissions is September 10th (see below) SYNOPSIS http://www.mundanetechnologies.com/goings-on/workshop/melbourne/call.htm l -------------------------------------------------- This one and a half day workshop, supported by Mark Rouncefield's European Microsoft Fellowship "Social Interaction and Mundane Technologies", and preceding the 2007 Australasian Conference on Computer-Human Interaction (OzCHI'07) is responding to the proliferation and developing constellations of 'social' and mundane technologies' in people's everyday lives. These technologies are often simple, minimalist and'loose' and yet support richly layered social interactions which are sustained and develop across time, place, and culture. This workshop will centre around the social interaction around three main classes of 'mundane technologies' - mobile technologies, domestic technologies and management technologies. We do not regard these as mutually exclusive categories and, indeed, an additional interest for us is how particular technologies can blur category boundaries and operate across different situations. Our particular interest is around the use of digital photos (e.g. mobile phone cameras), the generation digital documents of life (e.g. blogs, Web pages, text messages, phone call logs) and office technologies (e.g. wordprocessors, email, calendar applications) by leaders and, more generally, in everyday life. Put simply, we are interested in exploring 'real' studies of quite ordinary technologies that have already been appropriated (Carroll et al., 2002), domesticated (Silverstone, 1991) and subsumed into the fabric of family, social and organisational life and do particular work: maintaining a sense of community; assisting with everyday decision-making; maintaining "social translucence" (Erikson and Kellogg, 2000); providing channels for emotional labour; and so on. We also have a strong interest in how technology supports or fails to support the crossing of boundaries in everyday life - between home, work, public and 'third places' - and how we (use technology to) deal with the 'in-betweeness' of life. We define 'mundane technologies' as those quite unremarkable technologies that, given the context in which they operate, have been 'made at home', have become 'ordinary', in plain view yet subtly embedded because they are, indeed, part of the organisation already in place. KEYNOTE SPEAKERS -------------------------------------------------- Professor Rob Procter: Rob is Research Director for the newly created National Centre for e-Social Science at the University of Manchester. Rob's research interests concern socio-technical issues in the design, implementation, evaluation and use of interactive computer systems, with a particular emphasis on ethnomethodologically-informed ethnographic studies of work practices, computer-supported cooperative work and participatory design. -------------------------------------------------- Dr Keith Cheverst: Keith is a Senior Lecturer in the Computing Department at Lancaster University. Keith's research interests lie in the user centered design and evaluation of interactive systems that utilise mobile and/or ubiquitous computing technologies. -------------------------------------------------- Dr Dave Randall: Dave is a Senior Lecturer in the Sociology Department at Manchester Metropolitan University. Dave's key research interests concern ethnography and design and computer-supported cooperative work. -------------------------------------------------- THEMES AND INTERESTS Our primary interest is in understanding how 'mundane technologies' really work in people's lives. We are concerned with (but are certainly not restricted to) answering questions like: - What do people do to maintain a sense of community through blogging? - What is the role of digital photo sharing in family life, if any? - How do managers operate across technologies (e.g. email, mobile phone, Word, Excel) to lead in their organisations and what does each technology afford for them? One of our secondary interests is how mundane technologies can be useful methodological instruments in the ethnographic enterprise and how they can be combined with other, more 'traditional' approaches in social science research, to inform how technology is used and how practices, rhythms and routines are structured around technology to get work done. Our assumption is that these 'mundane technologies' are at a mature level of adoption, with seemingly well worked-out affordances so that their use has become so tightly entwined with activity and social interaction as to be almost invisible and thus, difficult to study and to be surprised by. We are also convinced that the digital trails left my individuals as they traverse their everyday lived and what people slough and shed via mundane technologies can provide real insights for the ethnographic enterprise: browser histories, mobile phone logs, temporary files generated on-the-fly etc.. We are interested in how these 'digital footprints' can provide insights into people's use of technology. Additional concerns are: how such technologies are 'made at home in the world';the social translucence afforded by such 'mundane technologies'; how they are hashed together with other technologies to get work done: how they are reconfigured over time as functionality evolves, the context of use changes etc. SUBMISSIONS & PARTICIPATION Attendance at this workshop will be via (a) submission(s) only (although multiple authors can attend). Papers should address the themes and interests of the workshop (see above) and can include position pieces, work-in-progress, new themes with old data, early reports from the field, and initial case study findings. Papers should be 4 pages in length and accord with the ACM SIG format. All submissions will be reviewed and selected on the basis of their relevance and interest. Successful authors will be invited to present (10 minutes) and discuss (5-10 minutes) their papers during the first day of the workshop. The second, half day of the workshop will focus on developing the themes and papers of the first day. The first day will consist of some formal talk and questioning, with the second consolidating the ideas in papers towards further publication. Revised papers will be published in a planned issue of the Personal and Ubiquitous Computing journal. Eventually we intend to publish an edited book from the themes and papers seeded at the workshop. KEY DATES -------------------------------------------------- Papers due: Monday 10th September 2400 (EST) To: cgraham [at] unimelb.edu.au -------------------------------------------------- Acceptance notification: Monday 1st October -------------------------------------------------- Accepted papers available: Monday 22nd October -------------------------------------------------- Workshop preliminaries: Sunday 25th November -------------------------------------------------- Workshop registration: Monday 26th November -------------------------------------------------- REGISTRATION COSTS The cost to attend this one and a half day workshop is AUS$200. This will include attendance at the workshop sessions, materials, refreshments and a workshop dinner. -------------------------------------------------- Please contact Connor Graham for further information: cgraham [at] unimelb.edu.au. ------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, send an empty email to mailto:[log in to unmask] For further details of CHI lists see http://sigchi.org/listserv ---------------------------------------------------------------