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Designing tangible interaction using short-range RFID

Nordby, Kjetil; Morrison, Andrew
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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Nordby, Kjetil & Andrew Morrison. (2010). Designing tangible interaction using short-range RFID. FORMakademisk, 3 (2): 77-96. (984.5Kb)
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/92976
Date
2010
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  • Artikler / Articles [99]
Original version
FORMakademisk. 2010, vol. 3 nr. 2, s. 77-96  
Abstract
Short-range Radio Frequency IDentification (SR-RFID) technology embedded in mobile

phones offers interaction design practitioners the potential to design new forms of mobile

experiences. The article presents a design oriented research study that seeks to develop

affordances specifically in support of such practice. To do so the authors draw on Activity

Theory. They present three levels of SR-RFID related design affordances: need related design

affordances, instrumental design affordances and operational design affordances. Included

also is what they label ‘RFID based Tap and Hold’; a term used so as to frame tangible

interaction on SR-RFID. A generative and descriptive model of Tap and Hold is proposed, as

is a set of input techniques derived from the Tap and Hold model. Overall, the study suggests

opening out from functional views of SR-RFID to ones that view it as a technology applicable

for designers exploring potential new interactions. This is important since such work may be

used to support the generation of new designs, an area often overlooked in research on RFID.
Description
Open Access - This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the source is credited.

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