Communities of everyday practice and situated elderliness as an approach to co-design for senior interaction

Eva Brandt, Thomas Binder, Lone Malmborg, Tomas Sokoler

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    Abstract

    In the co-design project Senior Interaction a public care unit, university researchers, industrial partners, and senior citizens are working together to design living labs applying digital concepts that can strengthen social networks
    and interaction among seniors. When approaching people who we envisioned to be the future users we realized that almost nobody among the people between 55and 75 years old identified themselves as ‘elderly’ or ‘senior citizens’, we realized that users are never just ‘out there’. Instead they tend to refer to ‘the others’ or even to their own parents. Rather than using biological age,
    institutional categories or similar formal ways to group the people that we imagine as the future users, we suggest to talk about situated elderliness. By associating elderliness not to all encompassing life circumstances but
    to certain everyday contexts we can turn our attention towards what we call communities of everyday practice that defines these contexts.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationOZCHI 2010 Proceedings
    Number of pages4
    Place of PublicationBrisbane, Australia
    Publication dateNov 2010
    Pages400-403
    ISBN (Electronic)978-1-4503-0502-0
    Publication statusPublished - Nov 2010
    EventOzCHI 2010 - Brisbane, Australia
    Duration: 22 Nov 201026 Nov 2010

    Conference

    ConferenceOzCHI 2010
    Country/TerritoryAustralia
    CityBrisbane
    Period22/11/201026/11/2010

    Artistic research

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