Authors

Janet Kelly

Abstract

The people who use a designed artefact are not the only ones who will experience or be affected by it, yet design discourse and practice are dominated by the concept of the user. This article introduces the notion of relationships other than use as an important consideration for design, in addition to relationships between users and artefacts. It identifies some related issues in design discourse with regard to the concept of use and discusses how the concept has emerged in design practice and discourse, with particular regard to participatory design. Different kinds of design relevant relationships other than use are presented and described through a case study involving designing with the pre-users of medical devices. The relevance for design is discussed and design examples are put forward to that show the importance of the consideration of these alternative relationships, along with suggestions of methods for working with them.

Keywords

Participatory design, User-driven design, people- artefact relationships

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Conference Track

Doctoral consortium papers

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May 29th, 9:00 AM May 31st, 5:00 PM

Relationships other than Use

The people who use a designed artefact are not the only ones who will experience or be affected by it, yet design discourse and practice are dominated by the concept of the user. This article introduces the notion of relationships other than use as an important consideration for design, in addition to relationships between users and artefacts. It identifies some related issues in design discourse with regard to the concept of use and discusses how the concept has emerged in design practice and discourse, with particular regard to participatory design. Different kinds of design relevant relationships other than use are presented and described through a case study involving designing with the pre-users of medical devices. The relevance for design is discussed and design examples are put forward to that show the importance of the consideration of these alternative relationships, along with suggestions of methods for working with them.

 

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