Faculty Research

Search Publications

Recent Journal Publications by COB Faculty

Search Publications

Filter & Sort Results: 36
[clear]
Publication Type Publication Type
Discipline Discipline
Year Published Year Published

Sort by

Showing results for: ""
Results:

Active Filters

Academic Journal
DSGN - DIM

“Diseño para la Transición: Entretejiendo saberes por medio de la conversación”

El Diseño para las Transiciones tiene el potencial teórico y práctico para transformar la disciplina del diseño hacia una nueva ética de práctica. Como marco emergente,reconoce que lo social, económico y ecológico están entrelazados y busca diseñar resultados contextuales, sistémicos, a largo plazo y plurales. Sin embargo, sin una pluralidaden las formas de difusión del conocimiento, más allá de la palabra escrita en inglés, losintentos de diseñar para transiciones hacia futuros más equitativos quedan atrapados dentro de una esfera epistemológica estrecha. Las autoras de este artículo ofrecen un caso deestudio de diseño para las transiciones a través del audio tapiz podcast bilingüe español/inglés Design in Transition/Diseño en Transición. Las y los diseñadores y aquellos quetrabajan en la transdisciplinariedad del diseño pueden aprender no solo del conocimientooral, bilingüe, entrelazado en cada episodio del podcast, sino también del arreglo organizativo emergente mediante el cual colabora el equipo de producción. Ofrecemos a las ylos lectores una descripción de las propiedades adaptativas y los componentes operativosdel podcast mientras describ
Full Details
Full Details
Academic Journal
DSGN - DIM

“Engaging with Theories of Change in Transition Design”

The transition design (TD) framework calls for integrating theories of change when designing for systems-level shifts. Meanwhile, a theory of change describes the relationship between actions taken and outcomes yielded in the process of initiating change. This paper recommends developing the capacity of transition designers to explicate the theories of change operating in our research and practice. To this end, the authors discern operational themes-situate, reframe, intervene-that can be found in TD work and offer prompts to help practitioners engage with the theories of change in their work.
Full Details
Full Details
Conference
DSGN - DIM

“From Focal to Scattered: Designing Culturally Adaptive VR for Chinese Architectural Painting”

Traditional Chinese architectural painting (jiehua), utilizes multi-perspective spatial composition and deliberate blankness (liubai) to create dynamic, interpretive visual experiences. These spatial and aesthetic conventions can pose cognitive challenges for non-Chinese viewers, particularly those familiar with Western single-point perspectives. Study 1 investigates these perceptual barriers through sketch-based interviews. Building on these insights, Study 2 presents an early-stage Virtual Reality (VR) prototype featuring perspective toggling and contextual annotations. Preliminary feedback suggests that these features enhance both spatial comprehension and immersive engagement. Future research will expand user testing to museum environments and broader cross-cultural contexts.


Full Details
Full Details
Academic Journal
DSGN - DIM

“How Aurora, CO leverages the Suburban Design of Decentralization with Mobile Social Services”

Despite rising suburban poverty nationwide, social services have not caught up with the needs of residents in sprawling suburbs, and nonprofits there often must stretch their operations across larger service delivery areas with fewer resources than those in larger cities. To address these challenges, suburban civic and community organizations are increasingly adopting flexible structures to meet the needs of vulnerable residents.
Full Details
Full Details
Conference
DSGN - DIM

“Human-to-human interaction design: Choreographing relational practices”

This paper explores Relational Design as a choreography of practices that cultivate the skills necessary to navigate differences and build community within design processes. It promotes a design practice that sees relationship-building as a core function of creating long-term stewardship in participatory worldmaking. The relational practices presented here emerge from outside traditional design disciplines, drawing primarily from community organizing, with an understanding that change occurs through networks of interdependent relationships. The paper outlines a trans-experiential set of practices: honoring place as kin, revealing and redistributing power, cultivating a culture of accountability, facilitating dialogue, and hosting belonging and celebration. These practices strengthen multimodal design literacies that focus on care, repair, and regeneration. Ultimately, the paper positions Relational Design as a movement for fostering pluralist, coalition-based approaches to systemic regeneration.
Full Details
Full Details
Academic Journal
DSGN - DIM

“Immersive HCI for Intangible Cultural Heritage in Tourism Contexts: A Narrative Review of Design and Evaluation”

Immersive technologies such as virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), mixed reality (MR), and multisensory interaction are increasingly deployed to support the transmission and presentation of intangible cultural heritage (ICH), particularly within tourism and heritage interpretation contexts. In cultural tourism, ICH is often encountered through museums, heritage sites, festivals, and digitally mediated experiences rather than through sustained community-based transmission, raising important challenges for interaction design, accessibility, and cultural representation. This study presents a narrative review of immersive human–computer interaction (HCI) research in the context ICH, with a particular focus on tourism-facing applications. An initial dataset of 145 records was identified through a structured search of major academic databases from their inception to 2024. Following staged screening based on relevance, publication type, and temporal criteria, 97 empirical or technical studies published after 2020 were included in the final analysis. The review synthesises how immersive technologies are applied across seven ICH domains and examines their deployment in key tourism-related settings, including museum interpretation, heritage sites, and sustainable cultural tourism experiences. The findings reveal persistent tensions between technological innovation, cultural authenticity, and user engagement, challenges that are especially pronounced in tourism context. The review also maps the dominant methodological approaches, including user-centred design, participatory frameworks, and mixed-method strategies. By integrating structured screening with narrative synthesis, the review highlights fragmentation in the field, uneven methodological rigour, and gaps in both cultural adaptability and long-term sustainability, and outlines future directions for culturally responsive and inclusive immersive HCI research in ICH tourism.
Full Details
Full Details
Academic Journal
DSGN - DIM

“Polytopophilia: Mobility-Just Design for Transitions”

Place-based design for transitions is positioned as a critical strategy for fostering systemic change through localized interventions rooted within communities and ecologies. In an era marked by hypermobility, displacement, and translocal entanglements, this framework faces profound limitations. Mobility, whether chosen or forced, has become a defining condition of contemporary life, shaping how people relate to, inhabit, and design for place. The tension between grounded transition efforts and the lived realities of uneven mobilities calls for approaches that integrate mobility justice within a place-ethics for design.
This article situates this kinetic era of mass movement as a backdrop for rethinking the spatial commitments of transition design. The paper argues that place is not a fixed or bounded entity but a relational and distributed construct.
Polytopophilia is introduced as an orientation of affection for multiple places that challenges static notions of rootedness and embraces the layered, networked geographies that shape contemporary life. Rather than assuming fixity as a condition for stewardship, polytopophilia affirms that people can cultivate deep commitments across dispersed and shifting locales.
Mobility-just design offers a critical extension to existing transition design methodologies by embracing fluid, distributed, and contested place-relations and infrastructures.
Full Details
Full Details