New book explores speculation in design research in the field of human-computer interaction
A new book co-authored by School of Interactive Arts & Technology professor Ron Wakkary and SIAT alum and Eindhoven University of Technology assistant professor Doenja Oogjes was published this August.
Wakkary and Oogjes's book, titled "The Importance of Speculation in Design Research," reveals how speculative reasoning in design research increases the capacity of human-computer interaction (HCI) to address a wider array of social and research challenges.
Wakkary and Oogjes reinterpret speculative design, design fiction, and critical design as central to design research in HCI and develop a framework for speculative reasoning and offers strategies and methods to use speculation across HCI.
"The Importance of Speculation in Design Research" explores speculation in design research in the field of HCI. The authors reveal how speculative reasoning in design research increases the capacity of HCI to address a wider array of social and research challenges. Speculation in design research employs (1) leaps of imagination, (2) diverse ways of knowing or epistemologies, (3) ethical reflexivity, and (4) makes alternate possibilities experiential. This book shows how each can be productively and critically applied together through existing, emerging, and new research approaches in HCI.
The aim of this book is to generously see speculation as more than a form of critique or genre of design research, to instead be seen as broadly central to the material investigations that govern much of the field. In doing so, the book aims to expand the potential role of speculation in HCI and shows how speculation is applicable to a wide range of research goals, which, in turn, creates research approaches in new directions. In expanding the approach and methodology of speculation in HCI, the books draw inspiration from other disciplines and intersectional perspectives.
By examining current, emerging, and possible new forms of speculation methods, this book will be of interest to undergraduate and graduate students in HCI as well as seasoned researchers and practitioners.
Provided by Simon Fraser University