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      Celebrating 65 years of The Computer Journal - free-to-read perspectives - bcs.org/tcj65

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      From Tele Presence to Human Absence – the pragmatic construction of the human in communications systems research

      proceedings-article
      People and Computers XXIII Celebrating People and Technology (HCI)
      Computers XXIII Celebrating People and Technology
      1 - 5 September 2009
      Sociology, ethnography, model(s) of the user, communications systems, media spaces, shared whiteboards, instant messaging, telepresence, computer science, philosophy, metaphysics.
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            Abstract

            This paper reflects on the views of the human that were oriented to in two distinct research labs and which have been used to populate an inventive landscape over the past twenty years. It suggests that there are commonalities to the views in question, making them essentially the same. Both emphasise body movement at the expense of expression and both, one could reasonably claim, derive from a conceptual dualism as regards human nature associated with Descartes and then adopted by the computer scientist, Alan Turing. The paper will argue that, whatever conceptual dualists in philosophy or computer science might want to claim or emphasise, the use of this view by the researchers in question was not because it offered an adequate ontology but because it was a pragmatically useful way of looking at the world that enabled and helped drive inventiveness. The paper will report on how this was applied in the domain of communication technologies, particularly telepresence type systems. It will remark on the benefits and limitations of this view for the inventiveness in question and how this view led to many technological innovations that have not been widely adopted and to an indifference to innovation in textually mediated communication, amongst other things. The paper will remark on the value this view might have for future research.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Contributors
            Conference
            September 2009
            September 2009
            : 73-82
            Affiliations
            [0001]Microsoft Research Cambridge

            JJ Thomson Ave

            Cambridge

            +44 1223 479824
            Article
            10.14236/ewic/HCI2009.9
            0fdb6b7b-6c51-41aa-97db-d8017aca2c56
            © R.Harper. Published by BCS Learning and Development Ltd. People and Computers XXIII Celebrating People and Technology, Churchill College Cambridge, UK

            This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

            People and Computers XXIII Celebrating People and Technology
            HCI
            Churchill College Cambridge, UK
            1 - 5 September 2009
            Electronic Workshops in Computing (eWiC)
            Computers XXIII Celebrating People and Technology
            History
            Product

            1477-9358 BCS Learning & Development

            Self URI (article page): https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.14236/ewic/HCI2009.9
            Self URI (journal page): https://ewic.bcs.org/
            Categories
            Electronic Workshops in Computing

            Applied computer science,Computer science,Security & Cryptology,Graphics & Multimedia design,General computer science,Human-computer-interaction
            philosophy,instant messaging,media spaces,metaphysics.,computer science,shared whiteboards,ethnography,Sociology,model(s) of the user,telepresence,communications systems

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