{"title":"捐赠自己:探索未来器官,组织和身体数据捐赠的AR路径","authors":"Stacey Pitsillides, G. Boddington, Tadej VindiŠ","doi":"10.1386/vcr_00064_1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article explores how communication and interaction design were used in the augmented reality experience, Donate Yourself. It aims to demystify some of the ethical and personal concerns around the donation of organs, tissue and body data for scientific and medical research. The research finds different modes of provoking thought around a central question: can augmented reality be used to open debates on who has access to our biological and digital traces beyond death? Taking into account how COVID-19 has made the public deeply reconsider their biological and data bodies, the paper documents and contextualizes the making of Donate Yourself, which was created in collaboration with interactive design collective body>data>space and scientists from the Human Cell Atlas project (HCA). In doing so, it explores the contested histories of human tissue in research and contemporizes these relations by looking at the way HCA members use and care for human tissue and data in their work. A range of methods that were used to capture diverse public attitudes and ethical concerns about donation using participatory approaches included: the co-creation of design probes with HCA scientists, online workshops, qualitative interviews, a documentation zine and public maker jam. These methodological lenses, and the data they produce, were used to construct a non-linear narrative and digital bricolage that is experienced as a hybrid public walking tour. Five themes were generated for the augmented reality experiences: care, trust, immortal, consent, future. This triangulation of science, technology and the arts was materialized in a webAR walking trail that ran during November 2021, which was accessed by the public via QR codes as part of the larger One Cell At A Time online exhibition, funded by the Wellcome Trust.","PeriodicalId":52193,"journal":{"name":"Virtual Creativity","volume":"127 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Donate Yourself: An AR trail exploring the future of organ, tissue and body data donation\",\"authors\":\"Stacey Pitsillides, G. Boddington, Tadej VindiŠ\",\"doi\":\"10.1386/vcr_00064_1\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This article explores how communication and interaction design were used in the augmented reality experience, Donate Yourself. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文探讨了如何在增强现实体验中使用沟通和交互设计。它旨在揭开有关为科学和医学研究捐赠器官、组织和身体数据的一些伦理和个人问题的神秘面纱。这项研究发现,围绕一个核心问题,人们可以用不同的方式引发人们的思考:增强现实能否被用来展开辩论,讨论谁能在死后获得我们的生物和数字痕迹?考虑到COVID-19如何使公众深刻地重新考虑他们的生物和数据体,本文记录并介绍了“捐赠自己”的制作过程,该项目是与互动设计集体>数据>空间和人类细胞图谱项目(HCA)的科学家合作创建的。在此过程中,它探索了人类组织研究中有争议的历史,并通过观察HCA成员在工作中使用和照顾人体组织和数据的方式,将这些关系当代化。使用参与式方法捕捉公众对捐赠的不同态度和道德关切的一系列方法包括:与HCA科学家共同创建设计探针,在线研讨会,定性访谈,文档杂志和公众制造者jam。这些方法论镜头,以及它们产生的数据,被用来构建一个非线性叙事和数字拼凑,作为混合公共徒步旅行的体验。增强现实体验产生了五个主题:关怀、信任、不朽、同意、未来。这种科学、技术和艺术的三角关系在2021年11月运行的webAR步行道中得以实现,公众可以通过QR码访问该步行道,这是由Wellcome Trust资助的更大的One Cell At a Time在线展览的一部分。
Donate Yourself: An AR trail exploring the future of organ, tissue and body data donation
This article explores how communication and interaction design were used in the augmented reality experience, Donate Yourself. It aims to demystify some of the ethical and personal concerns around the donation of organs, tissue and body data for scientific and medical research. The research finds different modes of provoking thought around a central question: can augmented reality be used to open debates on who has access to our biological and digital traces beyond death? Taking into account how COVID-19 has made the public deeply reconsider their biological and data bodies, the paper documents and contextualizes the making of Donate Yourself, which was created in collaboration with interactive design collective body>data>space and scientists from the Human Cell Atlas project (HCA). In doing so, it explores the contested histories of human tissue in research and contemporizes these relations by looking at the way HCA members use and care for human tissue and data in their work. A range of methods that were used to capture diverse public attitudes and ethical concerns about donation using participatory approaches included: the co-creation of design probes with HCA scientists, online workshops, qualitative interviews, a documentation zine and public maker jam. These methodological lenses, and the data they produce, were used to construct a non-linear narrative and digital bricolage that is experienced as a hybrid public walking tour. Five themes were generated for the augmented reality experiences: care, trust, immortal, consent, future. This triangulation of science, technology and the arts was materialized in a webAR walking trail that ran during November 2021, which was accessed by the public via QR codes as part of the larger One Cell At A Time online exhibition, funded by the Wellcome Trust.