Table of Contents

VOLUME XXXI.6 November - December 2024

  • WELCOME
    • Global, Green, and Generative Design

      Mikael Wiberg, Elizabeth F. Churchill

        Greetings, Interactions readers! Welcome to the last issue of the magazine for 2024. It's hard to believe the year has already come to an end. As we wrap up 2024 and focus on New Year's Eve, our resolutions for 2025, and what comes next, we should also reflect on…

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  • What are you reading?
    • What Are You Reading?

      Louise Barkhuus

      What Are You Reading?

        During a sunny fall afternoon, I found myself with a small break between a meeting and picking up my child. What do you do with half an hour of unscheduled time? I went to the local library to browse the shelves of new and noteworthy books. The topic of…

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  • Blog@IX
    • Breaking Barriers in Immersive Stories: Empathy, Representation, and Access

      Tyechia L. Thompson, Eric Lyon, Wallace Lages

      Breaking Barriers in Immersive Stories: Empathy, Representation, and Access

        Stories are ubiquitous, transcending traditional media and books, permeating our self-talk and scientific publications. Immersive technologies are no exception. Storytellers and artists are using spatial audio, virtual reality (VR), and augmented reality (AR) more frequently to create and share narratives about the past, the present, and the future. What…

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  • Exhibit X
    • Nordic Perspectives on Algorithmic Systems Card Box

      Pedro Ferreira, Michael Hockenhull, Mace Ojala, Rebeca Blanco Cardozo, Matti Nelimarkka, Airi Lampinen

      Nordic Perspectives on Algorithmic Systems Card Box

        The Nordic Perspectives on Algorithmic Systems Card Box started with a question. How can critical engagement with algorithmic systems be imagined elsewhere, outside the sociocultural context of the U.S.? Studies on the impact of algorithmic systems have flourished over the past decade, raising global awareness and concern. But they…

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  • Columns
    • Cutting Through the Code: Will AI Bring Efficiency or Reinforce Complexity?

      Jonathan Bean

      Cutting Through the Code: Will AI Bring Efficiency or Reinforce Complexity?

        A lot of work is, at best, drudgery. In my world, I can't say I look forward to grading multiple-choice tests or keeping up to date with the latest accounting and approval procedures. These are repetitive but necessary tasks that AI promises to do for us accurately and efficiently.…

    • Is It Normal for a Design Project to Go off the Rails?

      Jon Kolko

      Is It Normal for a Design Project to Go off the Rails?

        I've been working with a young designer, who is in the early stages of his career. We've been collaborating on a complex software design project, which includes new capabilities, legacy systems, multiple stakeholders, and many business units. It's progressing exactly as you might imagine: very slowly. The other day…

    • Defining Green UX

      Melissa Gregg

      Defining Green UX

        How do technology users learn about the sustainability credentials of software and hardware products? Is there a role for designers to communicate the environmental factors involved in building and using a product to those buying it? In this column, I'll consider a handful of individuals and organizations trying to…

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  • Forums
    • Historical Friction: Pacing Ourselves in HCI

      Michaelanne Thomas, David Ribes, Andrea Grover, Megh Marathe, Alexandra Teixeira Riggs, Firaz Peer, Pooja Upadhyay

      Historical Friction: Pacing Ourselves in HCI

        In the fall of 2023, a group of researchers gathered at a CSCW workshop as part of a broader movement to systematically introduce historicist perspectives to CSCW and HCI. While historical work has always been part of the field—often present in community-engaged research, case studies, and mining past designs…

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  • Features
    • Adventures in AI Wonderland: How Children Are Shaping the Future of AI

      Eliza Kosoy, Emily Rose Reagan, Soojin Jeong

      Adventures in AI Wonderland: How Children Are Shaping the Future of AI

        It is nearly impossible to navigate the modern world without being bombarded with artificial intelligence. It has become pervasive in our culture with a reach that crosses cultures and generations. My 89-year-old grandmother, who emigrated from the Soviet Union, called me recently and asked where she could get "an…

    • Design Solutions for Breastfeeding Devices for Infants with Disabilities

      Juan Li, Hemin Du, Junfeng Wang

      Design Solutions for Breastfeeding Devices for Infants with Disabilities

        Breast milk is the most natural source of nutrition for infants, and breastfeeding plays a vital role in the physiological and psychological health of mothers and infants. Smooth breastfeeding is a key factor in establishing a positive emotional bond between mothers and infants. Desley Hegney et al. [1] reported…

    • Scent and Space: Navigating Smell Interactions in Public, Private, and Virtual Spaces

      Anna Carter, Ceylan Beşevli, Christopher Dawes, Marianna Obrist

      Scent and Space: Navigating Smell Interactions in Public, Private, and Virtual Spaces

        On one cold spring morning, as I walked down Oxford Street in London on my way to the office, there was so much sensory experience to absorb, such as the chilly tactile sensation of a spring morning and the glaring sunshine. The city was bustling into wakefulness with shops…

    • Risk or Chance? Large Language Models and Reproducibility in HCI Research

      Thomas Kosch, Sebastian Feger

      Risk or Chance? Large Language Models and Reproducibility in HCI Research

        Large language models (LLMs) affect and transform most areas of daily life, from education and gaming to creativity and work. Exemplary LLMs are Llama, Alpaca, and GPT-4, with the latter being made accessible to the general public through OpenAI's ChatGPT. Consequently, ChatGPT reached 1 million users within five days…

    • The Usability Revolution: Forging a User-Friendly Utopia, One Click at a Time

      Elizabeth Rosenzweig, AJ Davis, Zhengjie Liu

      The Usability Revolution: Forging a User-Friendly Utopia, One Click at a Time

        Every citizen on our planet deserves the right to usable products and services. It is time we reframe our work and look at a bigger global picture [1]. We envisioned a world where the average citizen shares our zeal, passion, and steadfast belief in user-centered design. Naive perhaps, but…

    • Why the HCI Community Should Care About AR Journalism

      Victoria McArthur

      Why the HCI Community Should Care About AR Journalism

        On June 23, 2018, 25-year-old assistant soccer coach Ekkapol Chantawong led 12 team members, ages 11 to 16, on an exploration of the Tham Luang Cave in Thailand. Soon after the team entered the cave, heavy rainfall flooded a significant portion of the 6.2-mile system, trapping them inside. Nine…

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  • Cover story
    • Beyond ‘Slumming It’—AI and the Real Lives of Global South Communities

      Matt Jones, Dani Kalarikalayil Raju, Jen Pearson, Thomas Reitmaier, Simon Robinson, Arka Majhi

      Beyond ‘Slumming It’—AI and the Real Lives of Global South Communities

        Biases in AI datasets are well known, and their impacts in terms of misrepresenting gender and ethnicity are regularly surfacing in generative AI (GenAI) services. Many of us have seen examples of these—some of them absurd, some comical, and others completely inappropriate. A notorious example is the image Midjourney…

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  • Calendar
    • Calendar

      INTR Staff

      Calendar

        November ICMI '24: 26th ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (San José, Costa Rica) November 4–8, 2024 https://icmi.acm.org/2024/ PUSH UX '24 (Munich, Germany) November 7–8, 2024 https://push-conference.com CSCW '24: 27th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing (San José, Costa Rica) November 9–13, 2024 https://cscw.acm.org/2024/ SXC '24:…

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  • Exit
    • How Tall Can Wood Be?

      Juan José Ugarte

      How Tall Can Wood Be?

        Contributor: Juan José Ugarte Curators: Renato Verdugo and Scott Minneman In our previous issue, we explored how Giuseppe Penone's sculptures reframe our perception of trees. In this issue, we turn our attention to the architectural uses of wood—a material that humans have utilized for construction for nearly half a…

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  • Voices
    • The IX Questionnaire: Jeni Paay

      Jeni Paay

        This is the second installment of the IX Questionnaire series, where we ask ACM SIG volunteers about their volunteer roles and contributions. Jeni Paay is vice president of SIGCHI Chapters globally and vice president of the SIGCHI Melbourne chapter. What are you working on right now? I am involved…

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