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  • Values in Computing

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Values in computing

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

Published

Standard

Values in computing. / Ferrario, Maria Angela Felicita Cristina; Frauenberger, Chris ; Simm, William Alexander et al.
CHI 2017. 2017.

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

Harvard

Ferrario, MAFC, Frauenberger, C, Simm, WA, Whittle, JND, Fitzpatrick, G & Purgathofer, P 2017, Values in computing. in CHI 2017. CHI 2017, Denver, United States, 6/05/17.

APA

Ferrario, M. A. F. C., Frauenberger, C., Simm, W. A., Whittle, J. N. D., Fitzpatrick, G., & Purgathofer, P. (2017). Values in computing. In CHI 2017

Vancouver

Ferrario MAFC, Frauenberger C, Simm WA, Whittle JND, Fitzpatrick G, Purgathofer P. Values in computing. In CHI 2017. 2017

Author

Bibtex

@inproceedings{3f06d89d6bb8453690a3db49f346ffae,
title = "Values in computing",
abstract = "Whether it is in the form of software, system architecture or interface design, anything digital is inevitably affected by values: the organizational values of the project sponsor, the values of the research partners, and the values of each developer and designer. Some values (e.g. commercial success, academic prestige) are easier to quantify than others (e.g. social justice, care for the environment) with the latter often dismissed in decision making processes as lacking of measurable {\textquoteleft}evidence{\textquoteright}. However, less easy to measure values are not less real: they are simply less visible. The aim of this one-day workshop is precisely to investigate mechanisms which give more exposure to those values in computing that are less frequently considered. We do so by bringing together practitioners from different computing backgrounds (e.g. software engineering, interaction design, information systems) who have first-hand experience of trying to represent on an equal footing all human values in computing. ",
author = "Ferrario, {Maria Angela Felicita Cristina} and Chris Frauenberger and Simm, {William Alexander} and Whittle, {Jonathan Nicholas David} and Geraldine Fitzpatrick and Peter Purgathofer",
year = "2017",
month = mar,
day = "1",
language = "English",
booktitle = "CHI 2017",
note = "CHI 2017 ; Conference date: 06-05-2017 Through 11-05-2017",
url = "https://chi2017.acm.org",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Values in computing

AU - Ferrario, Maria Angela Felicita Cristina

AU - Frauenberger, Chris

AU - Simm, William Alexander

AU - Whittle, Jonathan Nicholas David

AU - Fitzpatrick, Geraldine

AU - Purgathofer, Peter

PY - 2017/3/1

Y1 - 2017/3/1

N2 - Whether it is in the form of software, system architecture or interface design, anything digital is inevitably affected by values: the organizational values of the project sponsor, the values of the research partners, and the values of each developer and designer. Some values (e.g. commercial success, academic prestige) are easier to quantify than others (e.g. social justice, care for the environment) with the latter often dismissed in decision making processes as lacking of measurable ‘evidence’. However, less easy to measure values are not less real: they are simply less visible. The aim of this one-day workshop is precisely to investigate mechanisms which give more exposure to those values in computing that are less frequently considered. We do so by bringing together practitioners from different computing backgrounds (e.g. software engineering, interaction design, information systems) who have first-hand experience of trying to represent on an equal footing all human values in computing.

AB - Whether it is in the form of software, system architecture or interface design, anything digital is inevitably affected by values: the organizational values of the project sponsor, the values of the research partners, and the values of each developer and designer. Some values (e.g. commercial success, academic prestige) are easier to quantify than others (e.g. social justice, care for the environment) with the latter often dismissed in decision making processes as lacking of measurable ‘evidence’. However, less easy to measure values are not less real: they are simply less visible. The aim of this one-day workshop is precisely to investigate mechanisms which give more exposure to those values in computing that are less frequently considered. We do so by bringing together practitioners from different computing backgrounds (e.g. software engineering, interaction design, information systems) who have first-hand experience of trying to represent on an equal footing all human values in computing.

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - CHI 2017

T2 - CHI 2017

Y2 - 6 May 2017 through 11 May 2017

ER -