Social Wormholes: Exploring Preferences and Opportunities for Distributed and Physically-Grounded Social Connections

Author:

Leong Joanne1ORCID,Teng Yuanyang2ORCID,Liu Xingyu "Bruce"3ORCID,Jun Hanseul4ORCID,Kratz Sven5ORCID,Tham Yu Jiang5ORCID,Monroy-Hernández Andrés6ORCID,Smith Brian A.7ORCID,Vaish Rajan8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MIT Media Lab, Cambridge, MA, USA

2. Columbia University, New York, NY, USA

3. UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA

4. Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

5. Snap Inc., Seattle, WA, USA

6. Snap Inc. & Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA

7. Snap Inc. & Columbia University, New York, NY, USA

8. Snap Inc., Santa Monica, CA, USA

Abstract

Ubiquitous computing encapsulates the idea for technology to be interwoven into the fabric of everyday life. As computing blends into everyday physical artifacts, powerful opportunities open up for social connection. Prior connected media objects span a broad spectrum of design combinations. Such diversity suggests that people have varying needs and preferences for staying connected to one another. However, since these designs have largely been studied in isolation, we do not have a holistic understanding around how people would configure and behave within a ubiquitous social ecosystem of physically-grounded artifacts. In this paper, we create a technology probe called Social Wormholes, that lets people configure their own home ecosystem of connected artifacts. Through a field study with 24 participants, we report on patterns of behaviors that emerged naturally in the context of their daily lives and shine a light on how ubiquitous computing could be leveraged for social computing.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computer Networks and Communications,Human-Computer Interaction,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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