posted on 2019-03-26, 09:54authored byRuth Neubauer, Erik Bohemia
As design in digital innovation has become a thing, we highlight the inconclusive concepts that describe design activity in innovation processes. Proposing an alternative theoretical lens - a sociomaterial practice lens - we claim that this view can reveal the contribution of digital designers to the work of innovation. This paper draws on a research study with digital designers in the UK. At the same time as we begin to reconceptualise the ways digital design activity can be described, we also illustrate a theoretical framework based on 1) action and knowing as ordered by collectively produced objects, 2) sociomateriality and the configuration of human bodies and materials in action, 3) the co-emergence of objects and sociomaterial configurations where each is the condition of the other. This alternative way of looking at design activity may pose some challenges to the theoretical traditions in the field. We however believe that it contains immense potential too.
History
School
Loughborough University London
Published in
British HCI 2018
HCI 2018
Citation
NEUBAUER, R. and BOHEMIA, E., 2018. Redefining innovation processes: The digital designers at work. IN: Bond, R. ... et al (eds). Proceedings of the 32nd International BCS Human Computer Interaction Conference (HCI 2018), Belfast, UK, 4-6 July 2018.
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Acceptance date
2018-06-18
Publication date
2018
Notes
This is a conference paper. It appears here with the permission of the publisher.