ARTIFACT ARCHIVE

The artifact archive contains a diverse collection of artifacts from the field of human-computer interaction (HCI) and beyond, which follow a post-anthropocentric design. This means that rather than being designed solely to serve human needs, these artifacts focus on human-nature relations. Specifically, the artifacts in the archive demonstrate various ways in which technology, ranging from non-electrified to complex computational artifacts, can bring humans and non-human entities of nature into contact, i.e., enable human-nature engagement.

The archive accompanies a scoping review, i.e., a structured, comprehensive literature analysis that deals with post-anthropocentric design and human-nature relations. This work, entitled “Mediating Human-Nature Relations Through Technology. A Scoping Review of Post-Anthropocentric Design Strategies” is published in the ACM journal Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI). The archive illustrates the analysis steps, which can be read in detail in the scoping review. Additionally, the archive serves as a resource for future research and inquiries.

Current archivists: Madlen Kneile, Sarah Sajid, and Matthias Laschke

Disclaimer
We take great care in archiving the artifacts, but errors or misunderstandings in their interpretation are possible. Additionally, not all artifacts can be displayed with a representative image due to copyright restrictions and the rapid publication process. Please contact us if you have any questions, feedback, or requests:
madlen.kneile@uni-siegen.de

ENTER THE ARCHIVE HERE
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