Unpacking Activity Theory
by Rachael Paine
When initially presented with activity theory as a conceptual framework within which I could situate design, I was curious.
Issue One: Spring 2017
by Rachael Paine
When initially presented with activity theory as a conceptual framework within which I could situate design, I was curious.
by Mac Hill
The Oxford Dictionaries declared “post-truth” as its 2016 word of the year.
by Clément Bordas
Consumption of meat in the United States is on the rise, with projections suggesting that it will reach a record high in 2018 of 200 pounds of beef, pork, and/or chicken a year per capita.
by April Maclaga
We all likely have had the experience of being passionately engrossed in conversation with someone when that someone suddenly breaks eye contact… to look at their phone.
by Alexandra Grossi
Since their inception, hearing devices have been designed to hide the user’s inability to hear.
by Anantaya Grace Wonaphotimuke
Learning new skills or entering a new social environment, even if it is a digital environment, can be overwhelming and stressful.
by Robin Vuchnich
I first started thinking seriously about the design of news on the internet and its influence on public sphere and debate in 2012.
by Amber Ingram
Face-to-face communication among members of American society has been drastically impacted by the use of the internet and social media, with both falling under the larger term known as digital communication.
by Scott Reinhard
Last year at this time, I was deeply thinking about the feeling of interactions.