The Data Hungry Home: Defining, Populating, Feeding, and Beyond

Matthew Lee-Smith (Loughborough Design School, Loughborough University, UK)
Tracy Ross (Loughborough Design School, Loughborough University UK)
Martin Maguire (Loughborough Design School, Loughborough University, UK)
Fung Po Tso (Department of Computer Science, Loughborough University, UK)
Jeremy Morley (Ordnance Survey, UK)
Stefano Cavazzi (Ordnance Survey, UK)

It's said that the pleasure is in the giving, not the receiving. This belief is validated by how humans interact with their family, friends and society as well as their gardens, homes, and pets. Yet for ubiquitous devices, this dynamic is reversed with devices as the donors and owners as the recipients. This paper explores an alternative paradigm where these devices are elevated, becoming members of Data Hungry Homes, allowing us to build relationships with them using the principles that we apply to family, pets or houseplants. These devices are developed to fit into a new concept of the home, can symbiotically interact with us and possess needs and traits that yield unexpected positive or negative outcomes from interacting with them. Such relationships could enrich our lives through our endeavours to “feed” our Data Hungry Homes, possibly leading us to explore new avenues and interactions outside and inside the home.

Citation

Matthew Lee-Smith, Tracy Ross, Martin Maguire, Fung Po Tso, Jeremy Morley, and Stephano Cavazzi. 2019. The Data Hungry Home: Defining, Populating, Feeding, and Beyond. In Proceedings of the Halfway to the Future Symposium 2019 (HTTF 2019), November 19–20, 2019, Nottingham, United Kingdom. ACM, New York, NY, USA, 10 pages. https://doi.org/10.1145/3363384.3363390

With thanks to our sponsors:

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With thanks to our sponsors:

University of Nottingham logo

SIGCHI logo

Microsoft logo