Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Low-Contact Co-Design: Considering more flexible spatiotemporal models for the co-design workshop

View through CrossRef
The recent global experience of COVID-19 has problematized the face-to-face co-design process and forced co-design researchers and practitioners to rethink the process of collaboration that typically takes place in a co-design workshop. This paper considers how we might continue to co-design when physical proximity is not possible. Recognising that technology has long played a role in co-design practice, we argue that to date, the technologically mediated experience of co-design has been largely based on the assumption of replicating the physical and embodied experience of the co-design workshop. Rather than accepting the deficit culture implied through the curtailing of much of the conventional face-to-face activities we associate with co-design, this paper reports on proactive research into novel possibilities for continuing collaborative research work through the concept of ‘low-contact co-design’. A series of proprietary visual models that explore a range of spatiotemporal conditions within which co-design practices can occur are presented. Opportunities for engaging with new communities, and in new processes are highlighted and a spatiotemporal framework for planning co-design processes is presented.
Title: Low-Contact Co-Design: Considering more flexible spatiotemporal models for the co-design workshop
Description:
The recent global experience of COVID-19 has problematized the face-to-face co-design process and forced co-design researchers and practitioners to rethink the process of collaboration that typically takes place in a co-design workshop.
This paper considers how we might continue to co-design when physical proximity is not possible.
Recognising that technology has long played a role in co-design practice, we argue that to date, the technologically mediated experience of co-design has been largely based on the assumption of replicating the physical and embodied experience of the co-design workshop.
Rather than accepting the deficit culture implied through the curtailing of much of the conventional face-to-face activities we associate with co-design, this paper reports on proactive research into novel possibilities for continuing collaborative research work through the concept of ‘low-contact co-design’.
A series of proprietary visual models that explore a range of spatiotemporal conditions within which co-design practices can occur are presented.
Opportunities for engaging with new communities, and in new processes are highlighted and a spatiotemporal framework for planning co-design processes is presented.

Related Results

Low-high-low or high-low-high? Pattern effects on sequential auditory scene analysis
Low-high-low or high-low-high? Pattern effects on sequential auditory scene analysis
Sequential auditory scene analysis (ASA) is often studied using sequences of two alternating tones, such as ABAB or ABA_, with “_” denoting a silent gap, and “A” and “B” sine tones...
A pragmatic approach to the ontology of models
A pragmatic approach to the ontology of models
AbstractWhat are scientific models? Philosophers of science have been trying to answer this question during the last three decades by putting forward a number of different proposal...
Estimates of Maize Plant Density from UAV RGB Images Using Faster-RCNN Detection Model: Impact of the Spatial Resolution
Estimates of Maize Plant Density from UAV RGB Images Using Faster-RCNN Detection Model: Impact of the Spatial Resolution
Early-stage plant density is an essential trait that determines the fate of a genotype under given environmental conditions and management practices. The use of RGB images taken fr...
Pracovná flexibilita ako nástroj zvyšovania rovnováhy životných oblastí: Je flexibilita vhodná naozaj pre každého?
Pracovná flexibilita ako nástroj zvyšovania rovnováhy životných oblastí: Je flexibilita vhodná naozaj pre každého?
Job flexibility has been found to support balance between work and personal life. Its effectiveness, however, is expected to depend on individual self-control. Procrastination (i.e...
Knocking sovereign customers off their pedestals? When contact staff educate, amateurize, and penalize deviant customers
Knocking sovereign customers off their pedestals? When contact staff educate, amateurize, and penalize deviant customers
Promoted by marketing discourses, customer sovereignty is characterized by the cult of the customer and the belief that contact staff have to serve the customer. However, research ...
A live event, a life event: The workshop that works
A live event, a life event: The workshop that works
In certain recent critiques, the term ‘workshop’ has been used to describe almost every aspect of our discipline’s pedagogy. The various models might be arranged along a horizontal...
Changing stereotype content through mental imagery: Imagining intergroup contact promotes stereotype change
Changing stereotype content through mental imagery: Imagining intergroup contact promotes stereotype change
Research has recently shown that imagining intergroup contact can reduce hostility toward outgroups. The present experiment explored whether imagining intergroup contact leads to m...

Back to Top