What Happens After Death? Using a Design Workbook to Understand User Expectations for Preparing their Data

要旨

Digital data has become a key part of everyday life: people manage increasingly large and disparate collections of photos, documents, media, etc. But what happens after death? How can users select and prepare what data to leave behind before their eventual death? To explore how to support users, we first ran an ideation workshop to generate design ideas; then, we created a design workbook with 12 speculative concepts that explore diverging approaches and perspectives. We elicited reactions to the concepts from 20 participants (18-81, varied occupations). We found that participants anticipated different types of motivation at different life stages, wished for tools to feel personal and intimate, and preferred individual control on their post-death self-representation. They also found comprehensive data replicas creepy and saw smart assistants as potential aides for suggesting meaningful data. Based on the results, we discuss key directions for designing more personalized and respectful death-preparation tools.

受賞
Honorable Mention
著者
Janet X.. Chen
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Francesco Vitale
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Joanna McGrenere
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
DOI

10.1145/3411764.3445359

論文URL

https://doi.org/10.1145/3411764.3445359

動画

会議: CHI 2021

The ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (https://chi2021.acm.org/)

セッション: Care(ful) Design / Other Worthy Topics

[B] Paper Room 04, 2021-05-14 01:00:00~2021-05-14 03:00:00 / [C] Paper Room 04, 2021-05-14 09:00:00~2021-05-14 11:00:00 / [A] Paper Room 04, 2021-05-13 17:00:00~2021-05-13 19:00:00
Paper Room 04
12 件の発表
2021-05-14 01:00:00
2021-05-14 03:00:00
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