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Social Textiles: Social Affordances and Icebreaking Interactions Through Wearable Social Messaging

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Published:15 January 2015Publication History

ABSTRACT

Wearable commodities are able to extend beyond the temporal span of a particular community event, offering omnipresent vehicles for producing icebreaking interaction opportunities. We introduce a novel platform, which generates social affordances to facilitate community organizers in aggregating social interaction among unacquainted, collocated members beyond initial hosted gatherings. To support these efforts, we present functional work-in-progress prototypes for Social Textiles, wearable computing textiles which enable social messaging and peripheral social awareness on non-emissive digitally linked shirts. The shirts serve as catalysts for different social depths as they reveal common interests (mediated by community organizers), based on the physical proximity of users. We provide 3 key scenarios, which demonstrate the user experience envisioned with our system. We present a conceptual framework, which shows how different community organizers across domains such as universities, brand communities and digital self-organized communities can benefit from our technology.

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References

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  1. Social Textiles: Social Affordances and Icebreaking Interactions Through Wearable Social Messaging

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          • Published in

            cover image ACM Conferences
            TEI '15: Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Tangible, Embedded, and Embodied Interaction
            January 2015
            766 pages
            ISBN:9781450333054
            DOI:10.1145/2677199

            Copyright © 2015 Owner/Author

            Permission to make digital or hard copies of part or all of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for third-party components of this work must be honored. For all other uses, contact the Owner/Author.

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            Association for Computing Machinery

            New York, NY, United States

            Publication History

            • Published: 15 January 2015

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            Acceptance Rates

            TEI '15 Paper Acceptance Rate63of222submissions,28%Overall Acceptance Rate393of1,367submissions,29%

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