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Message in a Bottle: The Use of Intermediary Objects to Convey Future Emotional Intentions During a Multi-Disciplinary Design Project

G. Arno Verhoeven
School of Design/ECA, University of Edinburgh, UK

Claudia M. Eckert
Design Group, Open University, UK

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Ingår i: KEER2014. Proceedings of the 5th Kanesi Engineering and Emotion Research; International Conference; Linköping; Sweden; June 11-13

Linköping Electronic Conference Proceedings 100:25, s. 329-336

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Publicerad: 2014-06-11

ISBN: 978-91-7519-276-5

ISSN: 1650-3686 (tryckt), 1650-3740 (online)

Abstract

In this paper we describe a recent design research investigation; highlighting ways in which a designer attempts to communicate to others their intentions regarding users’ emotional responses to future artefacts through the use of intermediary objects during design activity. We follow the interactions of a jewellery designer engaged in a project in partnership with an electrical engineer; a software developer; and museum curators. The overall design goal is to create an aesthetically desirable electronic object for use in a specific museum context; allowing the generation of personalized labels. This paper embraces an ethnomethodological approach to uncover ways the jewellery designer attempts to translate an intended emotional state (appeal and desire) towards the designed artefact in the future context; through intermediary objects; which are interpreted differently by different people across the trajectory of design activity. The use of intermediary objects during sociotechnical interactions in engineering design activity is well documented (Vinck and Jeantet; 1995; Boujut and Blanco; 2003; Eckert and Boujut; 2003) but our research suggests more work is required to understand the role that these types of devices play in intending and interpreting future emotional content; which is seen as a significant goal within product design disciplines. We discuss the concept of difference; and how it is managed during design activity involving various actors and actants; leading towards a better understanding of intention and interpretation during design.

Nyckelord

Design activity; design process; affective design; design intention; designer interaction

Referenser

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