41
Visualisation of Affordances Sander Dijkhuis Presentation of M1.1 project September 15, 2014 touch shift grab

Dynamic Form Giving presentation

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    2

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Visualisationof Affordances

Sander Dijkhuis Presentation of M1.1 project

September 15, 2014

touchshift

grab

Page 2: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Presentation

• Why do I want to visualise interaction?

• How did I approach this?

• What is my visualisation?

• Extra: things to consider in visualisations

Page 3: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Why?

Page 4: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Visualisation for interaction design

• Product: sketches, CAD models, Arduino

• User: personas, measurements

• Context: cultural probes, context mapping

• Interaction: Frogger framework (abstraction), video (limited trace)

Page 5: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Seeing Spaces slide by Bret Victor //worrydream.com/SeeingSpaces

Page 6: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Aerodynamics in a wind tunnel by BenFrantzDale / Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Page 7: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

SIT

WALKREACH

SIT

CHATKNOCK OPEN

WALKREACH

CHATKNOCK OPEN

KNOCKOPEN

WAIT

reality

irreality

time 1time 2

Visualisation of ‘life space’. Inspired by: Lewin, K. (1939). Field theory and experiment in social psychology: Concepts and methods. American journal of sociology, 868-896.

Page 8: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Interaction and influence surfaces. Badawi, M., & Donikian, S. (2007). The generic description and management of interaction between autonomous agents and objects in an informed virtual environment. Computer Animation and Virtual Worlds, 18(4-5), 559-569.

Page 9: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Describing dynamic perceptual environments. Tweed, C. (2001). Highlighting the affordances of designs. In Computer Aided Architectural Design Futures 2001 (pp. 681-696). Springer Netherlands.

Page 10: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Petri nets. See e.g. Murata, T. (1989). Petri nets: Properties, analysis and applications. Proceedings of the IEEE, 77(4), 541-580.

Page 11: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

How to visualise interaction?

Page 12: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

How to visualise interaction?

(dynamic, intangible, personal)

Page 13: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

How?

Page 14: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Requirements

• Theoretically OK

• Useful for design (research)

Page 15: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

= possible actions an organism perceives in relation to their environment (~ Gibson)

Picture: Found Table by Brenna / Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

Affordances

Page 16: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

TAgent perspective“I can get more light bytouching such a surface.”(‹ effect ›, ‹ (entity, behaviour) ›)

Environmental perspective“I offer the possibility to turn

on the light by the touch of a hand.”(‹ effect ›, ‹ (‹ agent ›, ‹ behaviour ›) ›)

Observer perspective“The light can be turned on by suchpeople touching such surfaces.”(‹ effect ›, (‹ agent ›, ‹ (entity, behaviour) ›))

Affordances

Adapted from: Sahin, E., Çakmak, M., Doğar, M. R., Uğur, E., & Üçoluk, G. (2007). To afford or not to afford: A new formalization of affordances toward affordance-based robot control. Adaptive Behavior, 15(4), 447-472.

Page 17: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Use cases for seeing affordances

• Education: what are affordances (not)?

• Simulation: iterate more quickly by testing prototype variations.

• Qualitative research: compare interpretations by sketching.

• …

• Design: sketch the affordances first, the product second.

• Sharing insights: library of affordances?

Page 18: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

What?

Page 19: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

“Design a remote control for a growing multimedia system.”

Page 20: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Exploratory prototype by Jordy Rooijakkers (2014).

Page 21: Dynamic Form Giving presentation
Page 22: Dynamic Form Giving presentation
Page 23: Dynamic Form Giving presentation
Page 24: Dynamic Form Giving presentation
Page 25: Dynamic Form Giving presentation
Page 26: Dynamic Form Giving presentation
Page 27: Dynamic Form Giving presentation
Page 28: Dynamic Form Giving presentation
Page 29: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Considerations

Page 30: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Visualising the lived world

Page 31: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Attensity of affordances

Shaw, R. E., McIntyre, M. & Mace, W. M. (1974). The Role of Symmetry in Event Perception. In R. B. McLeod & H. Pick, Jr., Perception: Essays in Honor of James J. Gibson. Pages 276 - 310. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press

Page 32: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Abstract representations

Inspired by: Thelen, E., & Smith, L. (1994). A dynamic systems approach to the development of cognition and action. Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press.

Page 33: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Showing relations

Page 34: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Taking a god’s eye view?

From: Dijk, J. van (2013). Creating Traces, Sharing Insight (PhD thesis at TU/e).

Page 35: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Perspectives on subjective experience

Page 36: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Perspectives on subjective experience

Page 37: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Visualising dynamics

Page 38: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Ontology for interaction

Page 39: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Conclusions

• Interaction design needs better visualisation techniques.

• The Visualisation of Affordances is an early example.

Page 40: Dynamic Form Giving presentation

Next steps

• Can this actually be used for design?

• How to deal with more complexity?

• Can we link it more closely to product and human body properties?

• How to measure the data?

• How to standardise the sketches?

Page 41: Dynamic Form Giving presentation