Peripheral Interaction: Embedding HCI in Everyday Life
Abstract
The comparison of actions in the physical world with actions on interactive
devices reveals a remarkable difference. In daily life we easily perform
several tasks in parallel, for example when drinking coffee while reading,
drinking may be in the periphery of the attention. Contrarily, we usually have to
focus our attention on each digital device we interact with. In recent years, the
concept of interacting with computing technology in the background or periphery
of the user’s attention is gaining traction. We call this direction Peripheral
Interaction, and see it as a very promising approach to fluently embedding the
increasing number of interactive devices into our everyday lives.
The workshop is intended to encourage hands-on explorations and discussion
about the definition of Peripheral Interaction, its design space and suitable
evaluation strategies. Albrecht Schmidt will give a keynote, entitled “Creating
Seamless transitions between Central and Peripheral User Interfaces”. While
the term Peripheral Interaction is not (yet) widely adopted, several design
disciplines already address different aspects of the core ideas of Peripheral Interaction
(e.g. ambient information systems, ubiquitous computing, implicit interaction,
eyes-free interaction, calm technology). We want to sharpen the focus
for Peripheral Interaction by offering a platform for exchange of knowledge and
community building to establish a network around Peripheral Interaction for
further collaboration.
This workshop invites researchers and practitioners from different disciplines
(e.g. computer science, interaction design, interactive arts, psychology,
cognitive science, product design and social science), to share their experiences
with human-computer interaction for the everyday routine, and aims to lay the
foundations for a structured exploration of the new interaction paradigm of Peripheral
Interaction.
More information about the workshop is available at the workshops website
www.peripheralinteraction.com and www.interact2013.org/workshops.