For teens
online tagged photos more precious than actual ones
Tuesday May 10, 2011 04:41:05 PM,
IANS
|
Washington: For young
people a digital photo that friends have tagged, linked and
annotated is more meaningful than a photo in a frame or a drawer.
"A digital photo is valuable because it is a photo but also
because it can be shared and people can comment on it," said John
Zimmerman, associate professor of human-computer interaction and
design at Carnegie Mellon University's (CMU) Human-Computer
Interaction Institute (HCII).
The very fact that virtual possessions don't have a physical form
may actually boost their value, researchers at CMU discovered in a
study of of a group of teenagers.
A fuller appreciation of the sentiments people can develop for
these bits of data could be factored into technology design and
could provide opportunities for new products and services, they
said, according to a Carnegie statement.
One of the teenagers said she always takes lots of photos at
events and uploads them immediately so she and her friends can tag
and dish about them.
"It feels like a more authentic representation of the event," the
16-year-old told the researchers. "We comment and agree on
everything together... then there's a shared sense of what
happened."
The penchant of people to collect and assign meaning to what are
often ordinary objects is well known. But a lot of stuff that
often is cherished - printed books, photographs, music CDs - is
being replaced by electronic equivalents, such as e-books and iPod
downloads.
For their study, William Odom, Zimmerman and Jodi Forlizzi
recruited a group of girls and boys, aged 12-17, from middle and
upper-middle-class families who had frequent access to the
Internet, mobile phones and other technology.
The researchers interviewed them about their everyday lives, their
use of technology and about the physical and virtual possessions
that they valued.
The online world, in fact, allowed the teenagers to present
different facets of themselves to appropriate groups of friends or
to family.
The researchers will present their study on Wednesday at the
Association for Computing Machinery's Conference on Human Factors
in Vancouver, Canada.
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