Search results for " scenarios"

showing 2 items of 42 documents

Editorial: Positive Technology: Designing E-experiences for Positive Change

2019

While there is little doubt that our lives are becoming increasingly digital, whether this change is for the better or for the worse is far from being settled. Rather, over the past years concerns about the personal and social impacts of technologies have been growing, fueled by dystopian Orwellian scenarios that almost on daily basis are generously dispensed by major Western media outlets. According to a recent poll involving some 1,150 experts, 47% of respondents predict that individuals’ well-being will bemore helped than harmed by digital life in the next decade, while 32% say people’s well-being will bemore harmed than helped. Only 21% of those surveyed indicated that the impact of tec…

positive technologyTechnologyWestern media outletsuser experience (UX)positive psychologylcsh:BF1-990positive emotionsOrwellian scenariosImpacts of technologieshuman-computer interaction; positive emotions; positive psychology; positive technology; user experience (UX)Editoriallcsh:Psychologyhuman-computer interactionPsychologySettore M-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALEPositive psychologyPositive emotionM-PSI/01 - PSICOLOGIA GENERALEPsychologySocial psychologyGeneral PsychologyDigital life
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Project into the Future. Introductory essay on the topic

2021

Investigating the Future is an established practice for the academy and the world of crafts and industry. From the Chicago Columbian Exhibition of 1893 to the two Worlds Fairs of New York City (1939 and 1965) and so on, the future has been foreseen as filled with technology and amazing architecture but not every vision of the future has described promising scenarios. The four visions of the future proposed by Norman Henchey (1978) conceptualized in classes – ‘possible’ (any future), ‘plausible’ (future that makes sense), ‘probable’ (highly likely to happen), ‘preferable’ (the best that could happen) – have been brilliantly described in the ‘Futures Cone’ reinterpreted by Joseph Voros (2003)…

project future scenarios sustainability environmentSettore ICAR/12 - Tecnologia Dell'Architettura
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