mapping conversation
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Conversations are one of the most important forms of
interaction, both face-to-face and online. The information
exchanged within them goes far beyond the facts that one person
tells another: how people use words, whether they interrupt
each other, how they use greetings, etc. provides key
information about their relationships, the importance of
what they are saying, and the impact of this exchange.
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assignment
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- Read: Please read all the papers.
- Write a short essay about what elements
Bonvillain discusses apply to online interaction and
which do not.
- Observe conversations in various places - at school, in stores,
over dinner, at parties.
Using one such conversation as a basis, draw an
abstract representation of it.
- You will need to decide what you want to
show, e.g. who is there? what was said? non-verbal
communication events (glances, gestures, surroundings
etc.) How do people start and end discussions, how do
they join in existing ones?
- How do you want to use space of your drawing: to show the temporal
evolution of the discussion? the key points? relative status
of the participants? the setting? Given your choice of
things to depict, how do you want to use graphics - shapes?
color? symbols? words?
Use this as an exercise both in
thinking about what is important about conversations and in
pushing the way you think they might appear when visuallly
depicted.
- Observe online conversations in various formats -
mailing list, discussion boards, IM exchanges, Twitter
feeds, etc.
Using one such conversation as a basis, draw an
abstract representation of it. In addition to the
questions you thought about in the face-to-face sketch,
you may find it useful to think about:
- how many people are there (and do you know how many others might be silently participating)?
- what constitutes a "conversation"? How do threads and topics emerge, mutate, disapper? Are multiple conversations carried out at once?
- What is the situation - and what is the purpose of the conversation? How is this maintained?
- What constitutes a "conversation"? How do threads emerge, mutate, disappear?
- What is the social structure of the group: do the participants seem to know each other? are there distinct subgroups? are there problematic participants?If so, how do the other members deal with them?
- How do the participants use the medium to convey social information (e.g. turn-taking, agreement/disagreement,etc.)? Are there discernable gradations of communicative competence within the group?
In particular, show how your design can be used as part of a
living conversational landscape - that is, not just a
visualization of an archived discussion, but as a context for
ongoing interaction.
Please link your work by midday on Monday.
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