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  • PersonalInfoandPlace

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Personal Informatics and a Sense of Place

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

E-pub ahead of print

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Personal Informatics and a Sense of Place. / Hollinshead, Jan; Harper, R.H.R.; Rouncefield, Mark.
Proceedings of the 36th Australian Computer-Interaction Conference (OzCHI’24). Brisbane: ACM, 2024.

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

Harvard

Hollinshead, J, Harper, RHR & Rouncefield, M 2024, Personal Informatics and a Sense of Place. in Proceedings of the 36th Australian Computer-Interaction Conference (OzCHI’24). ACM, Brisbane.

APA

Hollinshead, J., Harper, R. H. R., & Rouncefield, M. (2024). Personal Informatics and a Sense of Place. In Proceedings of the 36th Australian Computer-Interaction Conference (OzCHI’24) ACM. Advance online publication.

Vancouver

Hollinshead J, Harper RHR, Rouncefield M. Personal Informatics and a Sense of Place. In Proceedings of the 36th Australian Computer-Interaction Conference (OzCHI’24). Brisbane: ACM. 2024 Epub 2024 Nov 25.

Author

Hollinshead, Jan ; Harper, R.H.R. ; Rouncefield, Mark. / Personal Informatics and a Sense of Place. Proceedings of the 36th Australian Computer-Interaction Conference (OzCHI’24). Brisbane : ACM, 2024.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{8083a8d030fe46579b2bf9b2878b49dc,
title = "Personal Informatics and a Sense of Place",
abstract = "This paper reports a qualitative, small-scale study into a sense of place that emerges in the use of current personal informatics sports tools. Prior research has identified how data are folded into the felt life and how this has evolved into one where some commentators have suggested that people {\textquoteleft}dwell in data{\textquoteright}. The research asks whether this is still the case, or whether a sense of place is beginning to emerge in a slightly altered form of the felt life. The research shows that it is appearing and is central to many data centric embodied practices. But it also shows that what place means is shaped by the purposes {\textquoteleft}users{\textquoteright} have, whether it is place as a visual field, an enveloping sensory environment, or a way point in a life-long voyage. The implications this has for personal informatics in the future are remarked upon.",
keywords = "HCI, Personal Informatics., Place",
author = "Jan Hollinshead and R.H.R. Harper and Mark Rouncefield",
year = "2024",
month = nov,
day = "25",
language = "English",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 36th Australian Computer-Interaction Conference (OzCHI{\textquoteright}24)",
publisher = "ACM",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Personal Informatics and a Sense of Place

AU - Hollinshead, Jan

AU - Harper, R.H.R.

AU - Rouncefield, Mark

PY - 2024/11/25

Y1 - 2024/11/25

N2 - This paper reports a qualitative, small-scale study into a sense of place that emerges in the use of current personal informatics sports tools. Prior research has identified how data are folded into the felt life and how this has evolved into one where some commentators have suggested that people ‘dwell in data’. The research asks whether this is still the case, or whether a sense of place is beginning to emerge in a slightly altered form of the felt life. The research shows that it is appearing and is central to many data centric embodied practices. But it also shows that what place means is shaped by the purposes ‘users’ have, whether it is place as a visual field, an enveloping sensory environment, or a way point in a life-long voyage. The implications this has for personal informatics in the future are remarked upon.

AB - This paper reports a qualitative, small-scale study into a sense of place that emerges in the use of current personal informatics sports tools. Prior research has identified how data are folded into the felt life and how this has evolved into one where some commentators have suggested that people ‘dwell in data’. The research asks whether this is still the case, or whether a sense of place is beginning to emerge in a slightly altered form of the felt life. The research shows that it is appearing and is central to many data centric embodied practices. But it also shows that what place means is shaped by the purposes ‘users’ have, whether it is place as a visual field, an enveloping sensory environment, or a way point in a life-long voyage. The implications this has for personal informatics in the future are remarked upon.

KW - HCI, Personal Informatics., Place

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - Proceedings of the 36th Australian Computer-Interaction Conference (OzCHI’24)

PB - ACM

CY - Brisbane

ER -