English

Seeing through Things: Exploring the Design Space of Privacy-Aware Data-Enabled Objects

Human-Computer Interaction 2022-12-19 v1

Abstract

Increasing amounts of sensor-augmented research objects have been used in design research. We call these objects Data-Enabled Objects, which can be integrated into daily activities capturing data about people's detailed whereabouts, behaviours and routines. These objects provide data perspectives on everyday life for contextual design research. However, data-enabled objects are still computational devices with limited privacy awareness and nuanced data sharing. To better design data-enabled objects, we explore privacy design spaces by inviting 18 teams of undergraduate design students to re-design the same type of sensor-enabled home research camera. We developed the Connected Peekaboo Toolkit (CPT) to support the design teams in designing, building, and directly deploying their prototypes in real home studies. We conducted Thematic Analysis to analyse their outcomes which led us to interpret that privacy is not just an obstacle but can be a driver by unfolding an exploration of possible design spaces for data-enabled objects.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2212.08278,
  title  = {Seeing through Things: Exploring the Design Space of Privacy-Aware Data-Enabled Objects},
  author = {Yu-Ting Cheng and Mathias Funk and Rung-Huei Liang and Lin-Lin Chen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2212.08278},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

Data space exploration, privacy design, data-enabled objects, design ethnography, research projects, field study, 44 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-28T07:38:18.719Z