Human-computer interaction as science

Authors

  • Stuart Reeves Mixed Reality Lab School of Computer Science University of Nottingham, UK

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/aahcc.v1i1.21296

Keywords:

Science, disciplinarity, cognitive science

Abstract

The human-computer interaction (HCI) has had a long and troublesome relationship to the role of ‘science’. HCI’s status as an academic object in terms of coherence and adequacy is often in question—leading to desires for establishing a true scientific discipline. In this paper I explore formative cognitive science influences on HCI, through the impact of early work on the design of input devices. The paper discusses a core idea that I argue has animated much HCI research since: the notion of scientific design spaces. In evaluating this concept, I disassemble the broader ‘picture of science’ in HCI and its role in constructing a disciplinary order for the increasingly diverse and overlapping research communities that contribute in some way to what we call ‘HCI’. In concluding I explore notions of rigour and debates around how we might reassess HCI’s disciplinarity.

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Published

2015-10-05

How to Cite

Reeves, S. (2015). Human-computer interaction as science. Aarhus Series on Human Centered Computing, 1(1), 12. https://doi.org/10.7146/aahcc.v1i1.21296

Issue

Section

The Alternative Rhetorics of HCI