Difference between revisions of "Krummheuer2016a"

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|Author(s)=Antonia L. Krummheuer; Pirkko Raudaskoski;
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|Author(s)=Antonia Lina Krummheuer; Pirkko Raudaskoski;
 
|Title=Trying-out a walking help: Participation through situated learning in the adjustment and assessment of welfare technology
 
|Title=Trying-out a walking help: Participation through situated learning in the adjustment and assessment of welfare technology
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Assessment; Brain injury; Distributed agency; Material adjustments; Multimodality; Participation; Situated learning; Welfare technology
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|Tag(s)=EMCA; Assessment; Brain injury; Distributed agency; Material adjustments; Multimodality; Participation; Situated learning; Welfare technology; AI reference list
 
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|Year=2016

Latest revision as of 18:50, 29 March 2021

Krummheuer2016a
BibType ARTICLE
Key Krummheuer2016a
Author(s) Antonia Lina Krummheuer, Pirkko Raudaskoski
Title Trying-out a walking help: Participation through situated learning in the adjustment and assessment of welfare technology
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Assessment, Brain injury, Distributed agency, Material adjustments, Multimodality, Participation, Situated learning, Welfare technology, AI reference list
Publisher
Year 2016
Language English
City
Month
Journal Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics
Volume 30
Number 10
Pages 812-831
URL Link
DOI 10.1080/02699206.2016.1209245
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This article contributes to the discussion of how people with limited communication means become active participants in the assessment of welfare technologies. The article combines ethnomethodology with insights from Science and Technology Studies and emphasises the situated and multimodal practices that constitute the trial as a joint activity in which the impaired person becomes a competent participant and independent walker. The analysis is based on video recordings from a case study in which a person with brain injury is trying out a new type of walking help. The trial is understood as a situated learning process in which the participants prepare, enact and assess the performance of the technology-supported walking. The article distinguishes two iterative phases in which the impaired person is constituted as an independent walker: the adjustment and assessment of a body–device relation and, further, the performance and assessment of the activity the user can perform.

Notes