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Putting ethnography to work: the case for a cognitive ethnography of design

✍ Scribed by LINDEN J. BALL; THOMAS C. ORMEROD


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
192 KB
Volume
53
Category
Article
ISSN
1071-5819

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✦ Synopsis


The methods of ethnography and cognitive psychology are frequently set in opposition to each other. Whilst such a view may be appropriate in de"ning pure, or prototypical, classes of each activity, the value and necessity of such a distinction is broken down when researchers are goal-directed to study complex work domains in order to foster technological change. In this paper, we outline a rapprochement of these methods, which we term cognitive ethnography. The value of qualifying ethnography in this way is to emphasize systematically the di!erences between ethnography as a radial category and the kinds of legitimate method used to study work practices which are often referred to as ethnographic, but which in practice di!er in important ways from prototypical ethnographic studies. Features of cognitive ethnography such as observational speci"city, veri"ability and purposivenes challenge many of the tenets of a pure ethnographic method, yet they are essential for studies that are undertaken to inform technological change. We illustrate our arguments with reference to a project to develop a tool for supporting design re-use in innovative design environments.


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