%0 Conference Proceedings %T What Can Design Laboratories Do? %+ Royal Academy School of Design %+ IT University of Copenhagen (ITU) %+ Malmö Högskola = Malmö University %+ Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) %+ EXHIBIT %+ Siyakhula Living Lab Management Unit %A Thomas, Binder %A Malmborg, Lone %A Hilgren, Per-Anders %A Messeter, Jörn %A Yanki, Lee %A Gumbo, Sibukele %Z Part 4: Pannels %< avec comité de lecture %( Lecture Notes in Computer Science %B 14th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (INTERACT) %C Cape Town, South Africa %Y Paula Kotzé %Y Gary Marsden %Y Gitte Lindgaard %Y Janet Wesson %Y Marco Winckler %I Springer %3 Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2013 %V LNCS-8120 %N Part IV %P 775 %8 2013-09-02 %D 2013 %K codesign %K participation %K living labs %K community %K open innovation %Z Computer Science [cs]Conference papers %X The distinction between design and use is getting blurred in severalways as products and services increasingly are co-created in use, and use andusers proliferate and diversify. This has led to a growing interest in stagingwhat we here will call design laboratories that both involve future users incodesign and incubate emergent everyday practices of design in use. Very littlecan be said about novel designs or technologies before it is seen what the usersmake of it. This is particularly the case when considering mobile technologiesand social media where products seem to act more as an infrastructure fordesign in use than as a provision of well defined services. At the same timeenvisioning such new designs without being in close dialogue with the peoplewho are to appropriate them in new everyday practices may easily lead todisappointing results. This has led to a renewed interest in codesign and userinvolvement in such formats as living labs and codesign workshops. This panelbrings together researchers from some of the environments that most vigorouslyhas pursued this line of inquiry. Some of the panelists have suggested theconcept of design laboratories as a platform for open-ended explorations of theco-evolution of artifacts and practice. They see the design laboratory as aconfined space of controlled experimentation with what can be collaborativelyimagined, scalable through its rehearsals of experimental practices. With thisdefinition of these new collaborative formats the panel asks what it is thatconstitutes a successful design laboratory and what we can expect designlaboratories to accomplish in a world of diversity. %G English %L hal-01513716 %U https://inria.hal.science/hal-01513716 %~ LORIA2 %~ IFIP-LNCS %~ IFIP %~ IFIP-AICT %~ IFIP-TC %~ IFIP-TC13 %~ IFIP-LNCS-8120