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ARTICLES

The Contribution of Domestication Research to In-Home Computing and Media Consumption

Pages 195-203 | Received 24 Oct 2005, Accepted 21 Feb 2006, Published online: 24 Feb 2007
 

This article deals with the contribution made by domestication research to our understanding of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in everyday life, especially in the home. It first provides a sense of the diversity of research in this tradition and how this is evolving. The article then reflects upon and illustrates different elements of research in this tradition, providing examples of how these help to explain patterns of ICT experience, the way people evaluate that experience, and what bearing it has on their lives. To contextualize domestication research further, it considers overlaps with other traditions of research before moving on to the core, and the range of methodologies that have been employed. Finally, the article examines some of the general insights from domestication research, as well as more specific applications to the commercial and policy fields.

Notes

1. For Norwegian examples, see CitationSørensen (1994), CitationBerg (1997), and the collection by CitationLie and Sørensen (1996a).

3. CitationLally (2002) in Australia, CitationBakardjieva and Smith (2001) and CitationBarkardjieva (2005a) in Canada, CitationRusso Lemor (2005) in the United States, and CitationLim (2005) in China have also drawn upon this approach.

4. Little behaviour genre refers to typical styles of linguistic interaction appropriate for certain situations, such as the casual conversation of the drawing room.

5. This research required students to conduct one self-interview and interviews with 6 others—generating 550 semistructured interviews. A subset of these was selected for more detailed analysis.

6. However, we do not know if that related in any way to our recommendations—one of the common problems of commercial research is not knowing when happens once the report is handed over.

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