Meta-Design: A Framework for Software Design of the FutureProfessor Gerhard Fischer Friday 26th November 2004 at 11am Seminar will be held in JRCASE Seminar room in Building E6A (upstairs from usual location) *** Note unusual day, time and location *** AbstractIn a world that is not predictable, improvisation, evolution, and innovation are more than a luxury: they are a necessity. The challenge of design is not a matter of getting rid of the emergent, but rather of including it and making it an opportunity for more creative and more adequate solutions to problems. Meta-design is an emerging conceptual framework aimed at defining and creating social and technical infrastructures in which new forms of collaborative design can take place. It extends the traditional notion of system design beyond the original development of a system to include a co-adaptive process between users and a system, in which the users become co-developers or co-designers. It is grounded in the basic assumption that future uses and problems cannot be completely anticipated at design time, when a system is developed. Users, at use time, will discover mismatches between their needs and the support that an existing system can provide for them. These mismatches will lead to breakdowns that serve as potential sources of new insights, new knowledge, and new understanding. Short resumeGerhard Fischer (http://www.cs.colorado.edu/~gerhard/) is a professor of Computer Science, a fellow of the Institute of Cognitive Science, and the director of the Center for LifeLong Learning & Design (L3D) at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Current research interests include new media supporting lifelong learning, human-human and human-computer collaboration, (software) design, knowledge management, domain-oriented design environments, and universal design (assistive technologies). More information about the (L3D) center can be found at: http://www.cs.colorado.edu/~l3d/ |