New Paper: Tools for Wellbeing-Supportive Design
Our paper, "Tools for Wellbeing-Supportive Design: Features, Characteristics, and Prototypes" joins a series of others in the wellbeing design space collected for the special issue "Frameworks and Methods to Design for Positive User Experience and Wellbeing" in the Journal Multimodal Technologies and Interaction. Abstract
While research on wellbeing within Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) is
an active space, a gap between research and practice persists. To tackle
this, we sought to identify the practical needs of designers in taking
wellbeing research into practice. We report on 15 semi-structured
interviews with designers from four continents, yielding insights into
design tool use generally and requirements for wellbeing design tools
specifically. We then present five resulting design tool concepts, two
of which were further developed into prototypes and tested in a workshop
with 34 interaction design and HCI professionals. Findings include
seven desirable features and three desirable characteristics for
wellbeing-supportive design tools, including that these tools should
satisfy the need for proof, buy-in, and tangibility. We also provide
clarity around the notion of design for wellbeing and why it must be
distinguished from design for positive emotions.
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