Publication: Research - peer-review › Article in proceedingsCreated
Representation-phobia and the complexity of embodied interaction
Publication: Research - peer-review › Article in proceedings
In current interaction design research there is a widespread belief that situated action and embodied interaction should replace mental representations in the theoretical account of human cognition. This exclusion of representation is however diagnosed as a sign of representation-phobia by Anderson (2003) who claims that it is misguided. This paper aims to show why and how it can be overcome. Initially, a literature review will show how representation-phobia manifests itself through two different versions in HCI research. On the basis of this I argue that representationphobia leads to a theoretical dead end. Then, by drawing on semiotics and recent findings from cognitive research, I argue that we cannot understand the rich complexity of embodied interaction unless we furnish our thinking with a dynamic notion of representation.
| Language | English |
|---|---|
| Title | Proceedings of the Design Research Society Conference 2010 "Design and Complexity" |
| Number of pages | 15 |
| Publication date | 2010 |
| State | Published |
ID: 31531535