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Title Assessing the Impact of Educational Differences in HCI Design Practice
Authors Pedro Antunes, Lu Xiao, José A. Pino
Publication date August 2014
Abstract Human-computer interaction (HCI) design generally involves
collaboration
from professionals in different disciplines. Trained in different design
education systems,
these professionals can have different conceptual understandings about
design. Recognizing
and identifying these differences are key issues for establishing shared
design
practices within the educational community. Contributing to this
understanding, we
examined whether and how two different populations of students have
different knowledge
structures with respect to HCI design. We adopted the romantic, conservative
and pragmatic
dimensions, previously investigated in the related research, to elucidate
those differences.
This paper compares one specific type of design artefact-conceptual
frameworks-created by groups of students with different educational
backgrounds: Arts
and Engineering. It was based on a set of 22 criteria divided by two main
domains: scheme
(addressing form) and realm (focusing on contents). The obtained results
show that students
with background in Engineering (1) focus more on the product of design; (2)
rely less
on conceptual frameworks to guide the design process; and (3) produce
artefacts that are
more constrained in terms of signal-to-noise ratio, definition of a symbolic
system, and
information organization and shaping. We suggest that conceptual frameworks
serve to
communicate and understand design practice. We note that Engineering
students seem to
be more susceptible to fixation than Arts students and suggest that an
emphasis of
reflection-in-action could help compensating this problem.
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Pages 317-335
Volume 24
Journal name International Journal of Technology and Design Education
Publisher Springer-Verlag (Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany)
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