Follow your nose: history frames the future

A. Dix
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

As cultures and individuals, we look back to look forward, explicitly using lessons of the past to guide our future decisions. In this 30th anniversary of the AVI conference we can also look back in order to make the next 30 years even better. In 1996 I gave a keynote at the third AVI, both describing my own work in formal modelling of user interactions, and also pondering variations of ‘advanced visual interfaces’, imagining advanced aural and advanced nasal interfaces. This was part playful but also serious, uncovering the way our different senses give us different cuts through space and time. In particular, smell is deeply associated with memory both personal and spatial – that is history. In the meantime, scent has been used as a metaphor for information seeking, and now long-promised smell-based interfaces are beginning to emerge; we are about to enter an exciting world of multi-sensory experiences. However, it is on the metaphoric sense of advanced visual and nasal interaction that I want to focus now. The importance of tracing what is past and planning what is to come. This is true for our discipline as a whole, but also in moment-to-moment digital interactions. On the first of April this year, Nielsen Norman Group posted an article entitled “Support Recall Instead of Recognition in UI Design”. It was meant as an April Fool’s Day joke, but in fact the move towards gesture-based touch interactions means this is precisely how many feel today. This has exacerbated the long-term weaknesses of visual interaction heuristics and guidance when it comes to looking back, making it hard to ask, “why did that happen?”, or “how did I manage that?”, especially for older users or those who are less confident with digital technology. Finally, as we move forwards to tackle these and new issues, we need to constantly question what constitutes ‘advanced’: a fast-moving highway for a few or a wider frontier for everyone. The latter often poses the hardest design challenges but is most critical in a world where being digital is central to being a citizen. For more information see: https://alandix.com/academic/talks/AVI2022-keynote/
跟着你的鼻子走:历史塑造未来
作为文化和个人,我们回顾过去,展望未来,明确地利用过去的教训来指导我们未来的决定。在AVI会议30周年之际,我们也可以回顾一下,以便使下一个30年更加美好。1996年,我在第三届AVI上发表了主题演讲,既描述了我自己在用户交互的正式建模方面的工作,也思考了“高级视觉界面”的变化,想象了高级听觉和高级鼻界面。这部分是好玩的,但也是严肃的,揭示了我们不同的感官给我们不同的空间和时间切割方式。特别是,气味与个人和空间的记忆——也就是历史——有着深刻的联系。与此同时,气味已经被用作信息搜索的隐喻,现在,长期承诺的基于气味的界面开始出现;我们即将进入一个激动人心的多感官体验世界。然而,我现在想集中讨论的是高级视觉和鼻腔相互作用的隐喻意义。追溯过去,计划未来的重要性。这不仅适用于我们整个学科,也适用于实时数字交互。今年4月1日,尼尔森诺曼集团发表了一篇题为“在UI设计中支持召回而不是识别”的文章。这本来是愚人节的一个玩笑,但事实上,基于手势的触摸互动的发展意味着这正是今天许多人的感受。这加剧了视觉交互启发式和指导的长期弱点,当它回顾时,很难问,“为什么会发生这种情况?”或“我是怎么做到的?”,特别是对于年龄较大的用户或对数字技术不太自信的用户。最后,当我们着手解决这些问题和新问题时,我们需要不断追问什么是“先进”:是为少数人提供高速公路,还是为所有人提供更广阔的前沿。后者通常会带来最难的设计挑战,但在一个数字化是成为公民的核心的世界里,它是最关键的。欲了解更多信息,请参阅:https://alandix.com/academic/talks/AVI2022-keynote/
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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