TY - CHAP
T1 - Beyond Repairing with Electronic Speech: Towards Embodied Communication and Assistive Technology
AU - Curtis, Humphrey
AU - Neate, Timothy
PY - 2024/2/27
Y1 - 2024/2/27
N2 - Traditionally, Western philosophies have strongly favoured a dualist interpretation of consciousness - emphasising the importance of the 'mind' over the 'body'. However, we argue that adopted assistive technologies become embodied and extend intentionality within environments. In this paper, we restore an embodied view of the mind to theoretically enhance: understandings of assistive technology and human-human communication. Initially, we explore literature on: phenomenological theories of human experience, post-phenomenological accounts of technology, embodied accounts of assistive technology and participatory design. We then present a case study demonstrating the generative and disruptive effects of the embodied framework for co-designing AAC with people living with aphasia. Our findings show that the embodied framework supports a more multidimensional account of experience and suggests a shift from AAC devices that seek to 'repair' users' speech. Reflecting on our case study, we then outline concerns with nascent technologies that could disembody and limit accessibility.
AB - Traditionally, Western philosophies have strongly favoured a dualist interpretation of consciousness - emphasising the importance of the 'mind' over the 'body'. However, we argue that adopted assistive technologies become embodied and extend intentionality within environments. In this paper, we restore an embodied view of the mind to theoretically enhance: understandings of assistive technology and human-human communication. Initially, we explore literature on: phenomenological theories of human experience, post-phenomenological accounts of technology, embodied accounts of assistive technology and participatory design. We then present a case study demonstrating the generative and disruptive effects of the embodied framework for co-designing AAC with people living with aphasia. Our findings show that the embodied framework supports a more multidimensional account of experience and suggests a shift from AAC devices that seek to 'repair' users' speech. Reflecting on our case study, we then outline concerns with nascent technologies that could disembody and limit accessibility.
KW - AAC
KW - Alternative and Augmentatitive communication
KW - Embodied interaction
KW - Assistive technology
M3 - Conference paper
T3 - ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
BT - ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
PB - ACM
ER -