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Purpose: To draw on Activity Theory to interrogate uses to which technology is put.
References: 7, 39, 46, 47
- How to avoid what is meant to function as a tool becoming turned into an object, whereby the instrument becomes an overwhelming problem and thus an end in itself?
- Are technology producers able to identify user problems and needs — i.e., to make the critical shift between technology as an object and as a tool?
- How might breakdowns and failures of technological performance be taken as a possibility for creating new ways to redesign the product — and the whole setting — together with the users?
- If there is a focus shift (more deliberate than a breakdown), is it due to:
- The physical aspect of handling (e.g., control panel)?
- The handling aspect of the artefact (e.g., spreadsheet) not being transparent?
[printout has different capabilities].
- The conditions for operation in relation to the subject or object? [Object present only as a representation in computer application (e.g., word processor)]
- If there is a focus shift, ask:
- From what focus/object to what?
- Is it a breakdown or a deliberate shift?
- What causes the shift: the physical, handling, or subject/object-directed aspects of the computer application?
- Is the approach to technology techno-centric or anthropo-centric?
- Is it possible that the object [goal] and motive for the activity as a whole themselves will undergo changes during the process of an activity?
- What is the potential offered by the integration of technologies (e.g., applications: spreadsheets, word processors, graphics editors) as tools:
- in the potential to create easily controllable models of target objects?
- to give the user the opportunity to evaluate them?
- to manipulate them?
- Specific Activity-Level Questions:
Leont’ev (1978) formulated that activity is fundamentally defined by the meanings it seeks to realise: the needs and motives it seeks to satisfy [activity level], and the goals it seeks to achieve [actions], which are in turn dependent on the conditions [operations].
- In what ways does the introduction of technology change the operational level conditions , action level goals, and/or motives of the activity? (i.e., structure & goals)
- How are the elementary components of activity — operations — not just triggered by conditions, but determined by the general structure of the action they are incorporated into?
- Are two or more activities temporarily merging, motivating the same action?
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