
Technology in Action
£41.99
Part of Learning in Doing: Social, Cognitive and Computational Perspectives
- Authors:
- Christian Heath, King's College London
- Paul Luff, King's College London
- Date Published: June 2000
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521568692
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Despite the extraordinary advances in digital and communication technology over recent years, we know very little about the way these complex systems affect everyday work and interaction. This book seeks to explore these issues through a series of video-based field studies. It begins by discussing the introduction of basic information systems in general medical practice and ends with an exploration of interpersonal communication in advanced media spaces; in the process also looking at news production, the control room of London Underground and computer aided design in architectural practice. Social interaction forms a particular focus of these studies as they explore the way individuals use various tools and technologies and coordinate their actions and activities with each other. The authors also show how video-based field studies of work and interaction can inform the design, development and deployment of new technology, in this valuable new resource for academics, researchers and practitioners.
Read more- Explores how people use new technologies in their work, particularly how those technologies inform their communication and collaboration
- Examines work and technology in a range of settings including the control rooms of the London Underground, architectural practices, primary health care and newsrooms
- Uses video-based field studies to examine the details of action and interaction, and suggests ways in which such studies can inform the design, development and deployment of new technologies
Reviews & endorsements
'This excellent book does much to address the relationship between humans and technology in a truly encompassing way, by situating technology and its use in the broader human cognitive and social context, not just the context of the more typical computer-user dyad. In the absence of an understanding of what Lucy Suchman calls 'Situated Action', we shall remain doomed to violate human productivity and dignity with technologies which impose rather than invite; dominate rather than serve. Christian Heath and Paul Luff have given us a series of well-argued case studies which compellingly illustrate how a failure to take a broader view produces inferior technologies and also how the broader view can lead to truly productive technologies which empower rather than impoverish the human work experience.' John Mittlerer, Brock University
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×Product details
- Date Published: June 2000
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9780521568692
- length: 286 pages
- dimensions: 229 x 152 x 16 mm
- weight: 0.42kg
- contains: 14 b/w illus.
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
1. Technology and social action: computers and situated conduct
2. Documents and professional practice: 'bad' organisational reasons for 'good' clinical records
3. Animating texts: the collaborative production of news stories
4. Team work: collaboration and control in London Underground line control rooms
5. The collaborative production of computer commands
6. 'Interaction' with computers in architecture.
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