Intended for designers and researchers, Context and Consciousness brings together 13 contributions that apply activity theory to problems of human-computer interaction. Understanding how people actually use computers in their everyday lives is essential to good design and evaluation. This insight necessitates a move out of the laboratory and into the field. The research described in Context and Consciousness presents activity theory as a means of structuring and guiding field studies of human-computer interaction, from practical design to theoretical development. Activity theory is a psychological theory with a naturalistic emphasis, with roots going back to the 1920s in the Soviet Union. It provides a hierarchical framework for describing activity and a set of perspectives on practice. Activity theory has been fruitfully applied in many areas of human need, including problems of mentally and physically handicapped children, educational testing, curriculum design, and ergonomics. There is growing interest in applying activity theory to problems of human- computer interaction, and an international community of researchers is contributing to the effort. Contributors: Rachel Bellamy. Susanne Bødker. Ellen Christiansen. Yrjo Engeström. Virginia Escalante. Dorothy Holland. Victor Kaptelinin. Kari Kuutti. Bonnie A. Nardi. Arne Raeithel. James Reeves. Boris Velichkovksy. Vladimir P. Zinchenko.
%0 Book
%1 nardi95
%A Bellamy, Rachel
%A Bødker, Susanne
%A Christiansen, Ellen
%A Engeström, Yrjo
%A Escalante, Virginia
%A Holland, Dorothy
%A Kaptelinin, Victor
%A Kuutti, Kari
%A Nardi, Bonnie A.
%A Raeithel, Arne
%A Reeves, James
%A Velichkovksy, Boris
%A Zinchenko, Vladimir P.
%D 1995
%E Nardi, Bonnie A.
%I The MIT Press
%K activity theory contextual hci descriptive
%T Context and Consciousness: Activity Theory and Human-Computer Interaction
%U http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/redirect?tag=citeulike04-20&path=ASIN/0262140586
%X Intended for designers and researchers, Context and Consciousness brings together 13 contributions that apply activity theory to problems of human-computer interaction. Understanding how people actually use computers in their everyday lives is essential to good design and evaluation. This insight necessitates a move out of the laboratory and into the field. The research described in Context and Consciousness presents activity theory as a means of structuring and guiding field studies of human-computer interaction, from practical design to theoretical development. Activity theory is a psychological theory with a naturalistic emphasis, with roots going back to the 1920s in the Soviet Union. It provides a hierarchical framework for describing activity and a set of perspectives on practice. Activity theory has been fruitfully applied in many areas of human need, including problems of mentally and physically handicapped children, educational testing, curriculum design, and ergonomics. There is growing interest in applying activity theory to problems of human- computer interaction, and an international community of researchers is contributing to the effort. Contributors: Rachel Bellamy. Susanne Bødker. Ellen Christiansen. Yrjo Engeström. Virginia Escalante. Dorothy Holland. Victor Kaptelinin. Kari Kuutti. Bonnie A. Nardi. Arne Raeithel. James Reeves. Boris Velichkovksy. Vladimir P. Zinchenko.
%7 First
%@ 0262140586
@book{nardi95,
abstract = {Intended for designers and researchers, Context and Consciousness brings together 13 contributions that apply activity theory to problems of human-computer interaction. Understanding how people actually use computers in their everyday lives is essential to good design and evaluation. This insight necessitates a move out of the laboratory and into the field. The research described in Context and Consciousness presents activity theory as a means of structuring and guiding field studies of human-computer interaction, from practical design to theoretical development. Activity theory is a psychological theory with a naturalistic emphasis, with roots going back to the 1920s in the Soviet Union. It provides a hierarchical framework for describing activity and a set of perspectives on practice. Activity theory has been fruitfully applied in many areas of human need, including problems of mentally and physically handicapped children, educational testing, curriculum design, and ergonomics. There is growing interest in applying activity theory to problems of human- computer interaction, and an international community of researchers is contributing to the effort. Contributors: Rachel Bellamy. Susanne Bødker. Ellen Christiansen. Yrjo Engeström. Virginia Escalante. Dorothy Holland. Victor Kaptelinin. Kari Kuutti. Bonnie A. Nardi. Arne Raeithel. James Reeves. Boris Velichkovksy. Vladimir P. Zinchenko.},
added-at = {2006-03-24T16:34:33.000+0100},
author = {Bellamy, Rachel and Bødker, Susanne and Christiansen, Ellen and Engeström, Yrjo and Escalante, Virginia and Holland, Dorothy and Kaptelinin, Victor and Kuutti, Kari and Nardi, Bonnie A. and Raeithel, Arne and Reeves, James and Velichkovksy, Boris and Zinchenko, Vladimir P.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/26a36ff1a16edbf56a870870ef30fba4f/neilernst},
citeulike-article-id = {126516},
description = {sdasda},
edition = {First},
editor = {Nardi, Bonnie A.},
howpublished = {Hardcover},
interhash = {4558ea36aa68759a17d73b0f54c7af0e},
intrahash = {6a36ff1a16edbf56a870870ef30fba4f},
isbn = {0262140586},
keywords = {activity theory contextual hci descriptive},
month = {November},
priority = {4},
publisher = {The MIT Press},
timestamp = {2006-03-24T16:34:33.000+0100},
title = {Context and Consciousness: Activity Theory and Human-Computer Interaction},
url = {http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/redirect?tag=citeulike04-20{\&}path=ASIN/0262140586},
year = 1995
}