Granularity in reciprocity |
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Authors: | Caroline Nevejan Frances Brazier |
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Affiliation: | (1) Faculty Technology, Policy and Management, Delft Technical University, Jaffalaan 5, 2628 BX Delft, Netherlands |
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Abstract: | Witnessing in merging biological, social and algorithmic realities is crucial to trust, as modelled in the YUTPA framework.
Being witness and bearing witness is fundamental to human interaction. System participation in human communities of practice
challenges the notion of witnessing and therefore the ability to build trust. Nevertheless, through trial and error, people
in a variety of practices have found ways to establish the presence and develop trust in merging realities. This paper presents
the results of 20 in-depth interviews with professionals from a variety of disciplines and nations. The conclusion of cumulative
analysis is that systems do not witness themselves, but their output deeply affects the mental maps that human beings make
of each other, the world around them and their own self. Essential qualities human beings seek when being involved with other
beings are defined by granularity and reciprocity in the design of time (duration of engagement, synchronizing performance,
integrating rhythms and moments to signify), place (body sense, material interaction, emotional space and situated agency),
relation (shared meaning, engagement, reputation and use) and action (tuning, reciprocity, negotiation and quality of deeds).
By designing granular interaction in 4 dimensions, reciprocity in witnessing obtains significance and the basis for establishing
trust in a variety of presences emerges while human agency acquires potential. |
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