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A Plurality of Practices: Artistic Narratives in HCI Research

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A Plurality of Practices: Artistic Narratives in HCI Research. / Sturdee, Miriam; Lewis, Makayla; Strohmayer, Angelika et al.
C&C '21: Creativity and Cognition. New York: ACM, 2021. p. 1-14 35.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Sturdee, M, Lewis, M, Strohmayer, A, Spiel, K, Koulidou, K, Fdili Alaoui, S & Davis, JU 2021, A Plurality of Practices: Artistic Narratives in HCI Research. in C&C '21: Creativity and Cognition., 35, ACM, New York, pp. 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1145/3450741.3466771

APA

Sturdee, M., Lewis, M., Strohmayer, A., Spiel, K., Koulidou, K., Fdili Alaoui, S., & Davis, J. U. (2021). A Plurality of Practices: Artistic Narratives in HCI Research. In C&C '21: Creativity and Cognition (pp. 1-14). Article 35 ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/3450741.3466771

Vancouver

Sturdee M, Lewis M, Strohmayer A, Spiel K, Koulidou K, Fdili Alaoui S et al. A Plurality of Practices: Artistic Narratives in HCI Research. In C&C '21: Creativity and Cognition. New York: ACM. 2021. p. 1-14. 35 doi: 10.1145/3450741.3466771

Author

Sturdee, Miriam ; Lewis, Makayla ; Strohmayer, Angelika et al. / A Plurality of Practices : Artistic Narratives in HCI Research. C&C '21: Creativity and Cognition. New York : ACM, 2021. pp. 1-14

Bibtex

@inproceedings{67075b4ce097444aa57f7b8af2b4e843,
title = "A Plurality of Practices: Artistic Narratives in HCI Research",
abstract = "The arts and Human Computer Interaction (HCI) have a lot in common. As part of computer science HCI is ground breaking, interdisciplinary and focused on the interactions that form part of our everyday world. As part of the arts, HCI is a lens on technology, showing us spaces where there is room to interact and create new and meaningful blended experiences. It is therefore no surprise that many researchers and practitioners in our field have and maintain creative practices alongside, and as part of their research. We explore how these dual practices relate to each other, and how we might reconcile our mindful creative experiences with the formality of research. What benefits does such duality.",
keywords = "Arts practice, sketching, painting, embroidery, neural networks, dance, choreography, found objects, jewellery, illustration",
author = "Miriam Sturdee and Makayla Lewis and Angelika Strohmayer and Katta Spiel and Konstantia Koulidou and {Fdili Alaoui}, Sarah and Davis, {Josh Urban}",
year = "2021",
month = jun,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1145/3450741.3466771",
language = "English",
pages = "1--14",
booktitle = "C&C '21: Creativity and Cognition",
publisher = "ACM",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - A Plurality of Practices

T2 - Artistic Narratives in HCI Research

AU - Sturdee, Miriam

AU - Lewis, Makayla

AU - Strohmayer, Angelika

AU - Spiel, Katta

AU - Koulidou, Konstantia

AU - Fdili Alaoui, Sarah

AU - Davis, Josh Urban

PY - 2021/6/22

Y1 - 2021/6/22

N2 - The arts and Human Computer Interaction (HCI) have a lot in common. As part of computer science HCI is ground breaking, interdisciplinary and focused on the interactions that form part of our everyday world. As part of the arts, HCI is a lens on technology, showing us spaces where there is room to interact and create new and meaningful blended experiences. It is therefore no surprise that many researchers and practitioners in our field have and maintain creative practices alongside, and as part of their research. We explore how these dual practices relate to each other, and how we might reconcile our mindful creative experiences with the formality of research. What benefits does such duality.

AB - The arts and Human Computer Interaction (HCI) have a lot in common. As part of computer science HCI is ground breaking, interdisciplinary and focused on the interactions that form part of our everyday world. As part of the arts, HCI is a lens on technology, showing us spaces where there is room to interact and create new and meaningful blended experiences. It is therefore no surprise that many researchers and practitioners in our field have and maintain creative practices alongside, and as part of their research. We explore how these dual practices relate to each other, and how we might reconcile our mindful creative experiences with the formality of research. What benefits does such duality.

KW - Arts practice

KW - sketching

KW - painting

KW - embroidery

KW - neural networks

KW - dance

KW - choreography

KW - found objects

KW - jewellery

KW - illustration

U2 - 10.1145/3450741.3466771

DO - 10.1145/3450741.3466771

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SP - 1

EP - 14

BT - C&C '21: Creativity and Cognition

PB - ACM

CY - New York

ER -