Interactive Compositions

Author(s):  
Mikael Wiberg

Interaction design is a relational practice where interaction designers bring together many different materials into compositions that in return enable particular forms of interaction. However, and even though interaction design is about the design of interaction, interaction as this act that unfolds between a user and a digital artifact cannot be completely “pre-designed” in terms of fully controlled from a design point of view. Users might use a piece of technology as intended, but sometimes technologies are also used in unintended ways. Therefore, what the interaction designer can do is not to design the interaction, but to design good preconditions for a particular form of interaction, a particular materiality. When this materiality is used during acts of interaction we can refer to this intertwined relation of interaction enabled by, and performed with and through material configurations as the materiality of interaction. Clearly there are many aspects and dimensions to take into account when designing interaction (an in addition to thinking about how to materialize its intended form), so in this chapter I present a set of ideas for how an interaction designer can think about, and do, compositional and material-centered interaction design.

Author(s):  
Daiki Nakamizo ◽  
Seiya Kimura ◽  
Yuichi Koitabashi

<p>In order to use urban space effectively in Transit-Oriented Development (TOD), over-track buildings (built over railways), are becoming increasingly popular in Japan. From a construction and structural design point of view, the basement structure just beneath railways generally cannot be built while railway operations continue (interruption to operations is not permitted, In general).</p><p>This paper presents the structural design of a mid-story isolated high-rise building constructed over railways in Ikebukuro, Tokyo. The paper shows, not only the philosophy of the system, but also the structural design, full-scale experiments, and evaluation of the performance in each structural element. The authors believe that such a structural design will be one of the effective solutions to the over-track building.</p>


Author(s):  
Teresa Onorati ◽  
Alessio Malizia ◽  
Paloma Díaz ◽  
Ignacio Aedo

The interaction design for web emergency management information systems (WEMIS) is an important aspect to keep in mind due to the criticality of the domain: decision making, updating available resources, defining a task list, and trusting in proposed information. A common interaction design strategy for WEMIS seems to be needed, but currently there are few references in literature. The aim of this study is to contribute to this lack with a set of interactive principles for WEMIS. From the emergency point of view, existing WEMIS have been analyzed to extract common features and to design interactive principles for emergency. Furthermore, the authors studied design principles extracted from a well-known (DERMIS) model relating them to emergency phases and features. The result proposed here is a set of design principles for supporting interactive properties for WEMIS. Finally, two case studies have been considered as applications of proposed design principles.


Author(s):  
L. K. Doraiswamy

When a reactant or a set of reactants undergoes several reactions (at least two) simultaneously, the reaction is said to be a complex reaction. The total conversion of the key reactant, which is used as a measure of reaction in simple reactions, has little meaning in complex reactions, and what is of primary interest is the fraction of reactant converted to the desired product. Thus the more pertinent quantity is product distribution from which the conversion to the desired product can be calculated. This is usually expressed in terms of the yield or selectivity of the reaction with respect to the desired product. From the design point of view, an equally important consideration is the analysis and quantitative treatment of complex reactions, a common example of which is the dehydration of alcohol represented by We call such a set of simultaneous reactions a complex multiple reaction. It is also important to note that many organic syntheses involve a number of steps, each carried out under different conditions (and sometimes in different reactors), leading to what we designate as multistep reactions (normally called a synthetic scheme by organic chemists). This could, for example, be a sequence of reactions like dehydration, oxidation, Diels-Alder, and hydrogenation. This chapter outlines simple procedures for the treatment of complex multiple and multistep reactions and explains the concepts of selectivity and yield. For a more detailed treatment of multiple reactions, the following books may be consulted: Aris (1969) and Nauman (1987). We conclude the chapter by considering a reaction with both catalytic and noncatalytic steps, which also constitutes a kind of complex reaction. Because both chemists and chemical engineers are involved in formulating a practical strategy for accomplishing an organic synthesis, it is important to appreciate the roles of each.


1896 ◽  
Vol 42 (178) ◽  
pp. 541-583 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Julius Mickle

Chapter I.General Considerations—Normal Standards of External Brain Architecture—New Details of Unusual Forms of Convolutions and Furrows—Many Deviations from Type accepted from Several Observers—Chief Deviations from Usual Form in Brains examined by the Writer, and the lines on which they occur; their significance and appraisement from a general point of view.In an Address' in the Section of Psychology at the Annual Meeting of the British Medical Association, London, 1895, I touched upon some of the results of an analysis of many necropsies I had made, with regard to abnormal forms and arrangements of brain convolutions, and mentioned the dissatisfaction one had felt with some of the accepted standards of convolutional form. With regard to unsatisfactory standards of normal brain-form, it was stated in the Address that “we may take it for granted, and need not tarry to prove, that a different normal standard of brain-form obtains in different stages of individual life, in different races of mankind, and, as a logical inference, must obtain also in different ages of the world and epochs of time; for what practically concerns us at the moment is the normal set of standards for modern British brains. The standards of the normal, hitherto chiefly in use, and with which I began, were unsatisfactory, defective, incomplete, insufficient in range, and even misleading. For their unsatisfactoriness there are several reasons. One is that some of them have been diagrammatic or schematic, thus unduly accentuating some features and minimising or omitting others. Another is that the brains from which certain figures and descriptions are drawn have been taken from dissecting-room subjects, or from patients—most of them ‘incapables’ of various kinds, dying in rate-supported or State-supported institutions—of whose life-history little or nothing is known in many instances; who often are failures in life—waifs and strays—broken fragments of the wreckage of civilisation, the indication of degeneracy and breakdown. and such failures, waifs and wreckage are they very often—most often, indeed—because of their mental defect or perverted aberrant type of mind, which not infrequently has as its accompaniment, sometimes pathological brain change; but sometimes also, or solely, has an abnormal brain development and aberrant gyral conformation. Indeed, knew we their ancestral and life-history fully, we would search such subjects for some of the most interesting forms of convolutional deviation from type. and still more would this be the case, if, especially in the past and in some countries, dissecting-room subjects have been largely recruited from the criminals dying in prisons, and the mentally decayed and defective dying in asylums. Therefore it is not surprising to find that sometimes the brains taken from the sources previously referred to, and published as typical, are what I do not hesitate to declare and describe as being brains of deranged or of defective development, and utterly misleading if taken as normal.”


Author(s):  
H. Kanis ◽  
L.W. van Hees

This study focuses on the manipulation of pushbuttons and round rotary controls on consumer products in practice. It shows that these controls are operated in many different ways. The majority of the observed manipulations is applied both by physically impaired and non-impaired users. Variation occurs in both groups. However, variation which occurs in one group only, almost always occurs in the impaired group. People experiencing operational difficulties used hardly any new types of manipulation compared to smooth operation - that is when no difficulty is experienced in reaching a control, gripping it and exerting the required force. These findings suggest that operational difficulties function as incentives urging users concerned to resort to abilities which otherwise they would not have to draw on, rather than as constraints. From a design point of view the findings indicate that people facing difficulties in the use of everyday products would benefit from multi-operable controls, that is with a great degree of freedom for manipulation.


The current paper investigates the behavior of friction pendulum bearing. Recently developed Triple friction pendulum bearing exhibits as a adaptive in nature for the different level of earthquakes along with its flexibility in design point of view. Different level of earthquakes based on probability of occurrence are considered earthquakes are considered to understand the behavior of TFP bearings. To achieve the target damping ratio and time period, three different models are designed. The influence of increase in displacement shows more effective results in design bases earthquake.


Author(s):  
Jeff Gagnon

This paper will present the theoretical frameworks, research questions, and preliminary findings from $2 , a new study of movements for spectrum sovereignty. This foundational overview is a preliminary step toward a multi-year, international survey and case-study based project that aims to convene a space for the advancement of decolonized internet and communications networks predicated on the production of relational knowledges and the promotion of international solidarities. Centering the materiality of cyberspace necessarily reveals the relationships between the internet and settler colonialism. Such an acknowledgement is foundational to a decolonialist ethical point of view from which I argue for an understanding of space as relational practice, as resource, and as source of identity. A genuinely decolonized cyberspace that promotes the independence of colonized peoples is one that is subject to Indigenous spatial practices including territorial claims and treaty rights and so is one that is recognized as existing within space in a material way.


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