Monthly Archives: May 2017

Report: MediaNow Second User Panel Meeting

MediaNow’s second user panel meeting took place at the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision on the 24th of May 2017. Eighteen people gathered for the meeting to discuss the status of and insights produced by the project so far.  After a lively round of project update presentations by the involved researchers, members of the user panel actively participated in the morning’s MAKE, TRY and ASK sessions.

The MAKE session focused on mapping search processes of media professionals, researching specific topics for audiovisual items, projects or programs. The media professionals collaborated in small groups to draw flow charts or search scenario’s, and shared their ideas with the rest of the group afterwards.

During the TRY session, the exploratory search browser DIVE+ was tested. Guided by a number of search tasks, users tinkered with and tested the browser. Feedback was collected by means of an online questionnaire, as well as shared afterwards during the ASK session.

The researchers thank the user panel for their very active participation! Insights provided by the created search scenario’s  will help validate the team’s earlier findings about the context and practices of professional audiovisual search, while the DIVE+ testing will lead to recommendations for the further development of the search browser.

Presentation: Habit, craft and creativity: How digital search habits shape the craft of professional audiovisual storytelling

On the 29th of June 2017, Sabrina Sauer will present a paper at the European Network for Cinema and Media Studies conference, NECS Paris. The paper is titled ‘Habit, craft and creativity: How digital search habits shape the craft of professional audiovisual storytelling’.

Abstract:

The increased digitalization of audiovisual materials allows media professionals, such as news documentation specialists and documentary filmmakers, to increasingly make use of online access to digital archives to find sources for their audiovisual stories. This paper presents empirical insights into the digital search habits of media professionals, and questions how habitual user-technology interactions configure the craft and creative practice of digital storytelling.

Conceptually, the paper frames creative practices of media professionals by focusing on the tension between perspectives on habitual work routines and craft; between routines that are afforded by socio-technical context and ideas about individual creative agency. Here, the tension between habitual work routines and creative agency is studied empirically. By analyzing how media professionals make use of digital search technologies to retrieve archived audio-visual material for re-use in new digital stories, it becomes possible to form an empirically grounded understanding of how habits relate to craft; how habitual search strategies relate to socio-technical constraints and affordances and how, together, these shape creative processes and products.

This paper is presented in the context of an overarching research project that takes a user-centered design approach to co-create new open source search algorithms together with foreseen end users. The qualitative methods that are part of this approach, such as focus groups and semi-structures interviews, allow an in-depth understanding of digital search habits of the included media professionals. Apart from drawing conclusions about the relationship between habits, craft and creativity, the paper thus also draws methodological conclusions about how user-centered design methods can channel observations about mundane, tacit and habitual user-technology interactions into new media innovations.