Bodystorming

Bodystorming is a technique sometimes used in interaction design or as a creativity technique.

The idea is to imagine what it would be like if the product existed, and act as though it exists, ideally in the place it would be used. It is going through an idea with improvised artifacts and physical activities to envision a solution. This User Experience Design (UXD) technique is ideal to design physical spaces (e.g. the interior design of a shop) but can also be used to design physical products or software.

Opinions on this method

The proponents of this idea like to point out the fact that you get up and move, trying things out with your own body, rather than just sitting around a table and discussing it while having to imagine it in the abstract (as in the case of brainstorming). It is a proper user-centered design method, since it can be carried out by the designers as well as the users of the final product.

gollark: I don't have Minecraft open, RAM use and all, but I can show you a screenshot from an *emulator*.
gollark: As someone who has written thousands of lines of (dubiously useful) code for ingame computers, no u.
gollark: OC programs you write wouldn't need to run (directly) on your actual computer, because OC software is Lua scripts which run within the Lua interpreter within the OC mod, safely limited to only be able to affect specific ingame stuff.
gollark: You can even make computers out of redstone which can run software.
gollark: It totally is. You can, for very loose definitions of software, run it on a bunch of logic gates on a breadboard.

References

  • Oulasvirta, Antti; Kurvinen, Esko; Kankainen, Tomi (July 2003). "Understanding contexts by being there: case studies in bodystorming". Personal and Ubiquitous Computing. 7 (2): 125–134. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.59.7715. doi:10.1007/s00779-003-0238-7.
  • Schleicher, Dennis; Jones, Peter; Kachur, Oksana (1 November 2010). "Bodystorming as embodied designing". Interactions. 17 (6): 47. doi:10.1145/1865245.1865256.
  • Wilson, C. (2011). UXD Method 11 of 100: Bodystorming.
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