Proceedings of the 2017 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems 2017
DOI: 10.1145/3025453.3025487
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Proxemic Transitions

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Cited by 46 publications
(28 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
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“…These actions point towards designing for work surfaces with a greater adaptability to match with the lack of work areas and the changeable space-use needs, while ensuring ergonomics and comfort (RQ1, RQ2). The work of Petersen and Grønbaek et al (Takashima et al, 2016;Grønbaek et al, 2017;Grønbaek et al, 2020;Petersen et al, 2020) is an example of such interventions with a focus on informal collaborative work in office spaces; whereby shape changing interactive desks initiate dynamic work areas. Moving forward, bringing adaptive furniture examples to remote home workspaces would address enabling calmer transitions between domestic and work life (Stawarz et al, 2013;Toch et al, 2020), and assist with different aspects of remote connected work (Deloitte LLP, 2018).…”
Section: Reflecting On Field Observationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These actions point towards designing for work surfaces with a greater adaptability to match with the lack of work areas and the changeable space-use needs, while ensuring ergonomics and comfort (RQ1, RQ2). The work of Petersen and Grønbaek et al (Takashima et al, 2016;Grønbaek et al, 2017;Grønbaek et al, 2020;Petersen et al, 2020) is an example of such interventions with a focus on informal collaborative work in office spaces; whereby shape changing interactive desks initiate dynamic work areas. Moving forward, bringing adaptive furniture examples to remote home workspaces would address enabling calmer transitions between domestic and work life (Stawarz et al, 2013;Toch et al, 2020), and assist with different aspects of remote connected work (Deloitte LLP, 2018).…”
Section: Reflecting On Field Observationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other projects explore the potential of adaptive and digitally enhanced architectural elements to encourage social interaction at the workspace (Follmer et al, 2013;Takashima et al, 2016;Grønbaek et al, 2017;Jäger et al, 2017;Grønbaek et al, 2020;Petersen et al, 2020). Working on dynamic affordances and proxemic transitions, Grønbaek et al (2017), Grønbaek et al (2020) and Petersen et al (2020) explore the potentials of shape changing interfaces to support social interactions in collocated informal meetings. Kirigami table (Grønbaek et al, 2020) is a shape changing meeting table and an interactive display for co-located collaboration, creating opportunities for dynamic socio-spatial interactions.…”
Section: Introducing Ambient Workpacesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other studies have focused on modifying contiguous screen layouts to promote collaboration. For example, Hinckley et al [16] explore the design space of a dual screen posture for individual and collaborative use, Grønbaek et al [15] study the notion of proxemic transitions when modifying a workspace based on two articulated surfaces. In continuity of these two approaches, we explored more precisely the impact of using articulated screens on collaboration and situational awareness in a life critical context.…”
Section: Articulated Displaysmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interactive tabletops have shown great promise for supporting collaboration [59,63,27]. However, several researchers have pointed out that a core challenge for research on shared displays (such as tabletops and wall-displays) is to support transitions between different ways of engaging with co-located others [16,64,6,19,50]. Recent research in actuated shape displays has begun to address this challenge through design of shape-changing furniture [13,42,29,66,67,19].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, several researchers have pointed out that a core challenge for research on shared displays (such as tabletops and wall-displays) is to support transitions between different ways of engaging with co-located others [16,64,6,19,50]. Recent research in actuated shape displays has begun to address this challenge through design of shape-changing furniture [13,42,29,66,67,19]. With TRANSFORM, Leithinger et al [42] demonstrate how a shape-changing tabletop can support a variety of activities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%