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

The Ngā Ara Whakamana Process: Conceptualising and Designing a Process to Engage with Māori Trust Factors in the Development of IT Artefacts

View through CrossRef
<p><strong>As technology becomes ever more present, there continues to be a disconnect between the IT artefacts created and the needs of the Māori communities that use them or that they are developed. This has led to Māori having a historic mistrust of technology, with many examples highlighting the damage that a lack of consultation, consideration, and engagement with these communities has had. While discussions around this disconnect continue, there is a lack of understanding surrounding trust in technology from a Māori perspective and how to create trusted IT artefacts for Māori. Through an exploration of existing research and interviews with Māori, this research identifies mātauranga, tikanga and taonga as being three of the most significant factors that need to be considered when building trust from a Māori perspective. Each of these three factors are explored in depth with a theoretical understanding of each factor built before looking at how each of these have been applied within the creation of IT artefacts to explore what engagement with each of these would look like. Alongside this, Māori models for both technical spaces and non-technical spaces are explored in the process of conceptualising The Ngā Ara Whakamana Process that can be adopted for the creation of IT artefacts that can be considered trust and engage with Māori factors of trust. Working as part of the Veracity Research Spearhead Project, a trust evaluation algorithm is used as a use case to demonstrate how this process can be used in the development of an IT artefact. For this, an exploration of trust evaluation tools is conducted and the findings and split them into three different categories. Those that focus on trust within networks, those looking at trust in behaviour, and those that consider trust using natural language processing. Ultimately a natural language processing approach is taken with a large language model utilised to increase the level of engagement and context awareness of the Māori factors applied within the development of the algorithm. The key findings from this approach can be used to help address the gaps in the literature surrounding what trust from a Māori perspective looks like. They also offer the potential to drive forward the development of uniquely Māori IT artefacts by providing a path for engaging with the important factors when developing and maintaining IT artefacts developed for, or with Māori.</strong></p>
Victoria University of Wellington Library
Title: The Ngā Ara Whakamana Process: Conceptualising and Designing a Process to Engage with Māori Trust Factors in the Development of IT Artefacts
Description:
<p><strong>As technology becomes ever more present, there continues to be a disconnect between the IT artefacts created and the needs of the Māori communities that use them or that they are developed.
This has led to Māori having a historic mistrust of technology, with many examples highlighting the damage that a lack of consultation, consideration, and engagement with these communities has had.
While discussions around this disconnect continue, there is a lack of understanding surrounding trust in technology from a Māori perspective and how to create trusted IT artefacts for Māori.
Through an exploration of existing research and interviews with Māori, this research identifies mātauranga, tikanga and taonga as being three of the most significant factors that need to be considered when building trust from a Māori perspective.
Each of these three factors are explored in depth with a theoretical understanding of each factor built before looking at how each of these have been applied within the creation of IT artefacts to explore what engagement with each of these would look like.
Alongside this, Māori models for both technical spaces and non-technical spaces are explored in the process of conceptualising The Ngā Ara Whakamana Process that can be adopted for the creation of IT artefacts that can be considered trust and engage with Māori factors of trust.
Working as part of the Veracity Research Spearhead Project, a trust evaluation algorithm is used as a use case to demonstrate how this process can be used in the development of an IT artefact.
For this, an exploration of trust evaluation tools is conducted and the findings and split them into three different categories.
Those that focus on trust within networks, those looking at trust in behaviour, and those that consider trust using natural language processing.
Ultimately a natural language processing approach is taken with a large language model utilised to increase the level of engagement and context awareness of the Māori factors applied within the development of the algorithm.
The key findings from this approach can be used to help address the gaps in the literature surrounding what trust from a Māori perspective looks like.
They also offer the potential to drive forward the development of uniquely Māori IT artefacts by providing a path for engaging with the important factors when developing and maintaining IT artefacts developed for, or with Māori.
</strong></p>.

Related Results

Māori Art and Architecture
Māori Art and Architecture
Maori art history originates in Te Po/The Darkness when the parents Ranginui/Sky Father and Papatūānuku/Earth Mother were joined. They were later separated by some of their sons wh...
Tika Tonu: Young Māori Mothers' Experiences of Wellbeing Surrounding the Birth of their First Tamaiti
Tika Tonu: Young Māori Mothers' Experiences of Wellbeing Surrounding the Birth of their First Tamaiti
<p>The wellbeing experiences of young Māori mothers’ (ngā māmā) surrounding the birth of their first tamaiti and the impact of those experiences, often determine outcomes for...
Tangata Ngākau: Māori Boys and Masculinity in the Writing of Bruce Stewart, Witi Ihimaera, and Whiti Hereaka
Tangata Ngākau: Māori Boys and Masculinity in the Writing of Bruce Stewart, Witi Ihimaera, and Whiti Hereaka
<p>This thesis surveys a selection of writing by Bruce Stewart, Witi Ihimaera, and Whiti Hereaka, and considers how these texts represent varying modes of masculinity availab...
Understanding the Māori Television Service’s Policy and Legislation: The First Ten Years
Understanding the Māori Television Service’s Policy and Legislation: The First Ten Years
<p>he Māori Television Service emerged in 2004 after many years of political agitation by Māori for the New Zealand government to protect and promote Māori language and cultu...
Reo Rua (Two Voices): a cross-cultural Māori-non-Māori creative collaboration
Reo Rua (Two Voices): a cross-cultural Māori-non-Māori creative collaboration
In the last decades, there has been an emergence of an academic discourse called Indigenous knowledge internationally, creating a myriad of possibilities for research led by creati...
An exploration of the maternity experiences of Wāhine Māori in their encounters with midwife Lead Maternity Carers
An exploration of the maternity experiences of Wāhine Māori in their encounters with midwife Lead Maternity Carers
The purpose of this research was to explore the maternity experiences of Māori women to understand the optimal conditions needed to provide women-centred relationships with midwife...
Mā te kimi ka kite, mā te kite ka mōhio, mā te mōhio ka mārama
Mā te kimi ka kite, mā te kite ka mōhio, mā te mōhio ka mārama
<p><b>Over the past 200-years, urbanisation has shaped how society resides in Aotearoa; particularly, where Indigenous Māori dwell. Concerning the west coast of Aotearo...
Toi moko Tū Atu Toi moko Tū Mai - The Trade and Repatriation of Toi moko
Toi moko Tū Atu Toi moko Tū Mai - The Trade and Repatriation of Toi moko
<p><b>This thesis focuses on tikanga Māori (deep Māori philosophy, traditions, ethics and values) associated with the commercial trade of Toi moko (preserved Māori ance...

Back to Top