
An Interdisciplinary Journal on Humans in ICT Environments
www.humantechnology.jyu.fi
ISSN: 1795-6889
Volume 4 (2), November 2008, 209-228
INVENTING NEW USES FOR TOOLS: A COGNITIVE FOUNDATION FOR STUDIES ON APPROPRIATION
Abstract
Appropriation refers to the processes that take place when new uses are invented for
tools and when these uses develop into practices and start spreading within a user
community. Most research in human-computer interaction and computer-supported
cooperative work to date has studied this phenomenon from a social sciences approach,
thus focusing on the practice side of the phenomenon. This paper addresses
appropriation from the other direction, drawing from ecological psychology and
focusing on cognitive processes in context. Appropriation from this perspective is
understood as an interpretation process in which the user perceives in a tool a new
opportunity for action, thus acquiring a new mental usage schema that complements the
existing uses. This approach highlights the need to study how schemata are put into
use and how they evolve through new interpretations. Ensuing research questions are
presented together with three strategies of applying the new approach in system design.
Keywords:
appropriation, schema, artifact, tool, ecological psychology.
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