1990-1992 Communication patterns of collaborating designers

Employment context:

Employed at Loughborough University of Technology Computer Human Interface (LUTCHI) group, a UK Centre for excellence in Human Computer Interaction.  I joined the 2nd year of a 3 year Science and Engineering Research Council, Government,  funded multi-disciplinary research project called ROCOCO.  The ROCOCO project studied the impact of computer mediation on the communication patterns of designers to establish the user requirements for remotely collaborating product designers. 

Responsibilities included:

  1. Design an analytical approach to enable a team including Linguists, Computer Software engineers, Psychologists, Product Designers, to
    • See patterns in the data
    • Understand what can and cannot be concluded from the data.
    • Communicate the results effectively to peers and respective scientific journals.
  2. Learn John Searle’s Speech Act theory and application,  code 25 hours of conversation using speech-act theory, liaise with team members to identify the implications of the analysis.
  3. Contribute to ideas for publications arising from the research,  produce appropriate data summaries per publication and review contents prior to submission to journals.

Other professional: 
Registered as a Chartered member of the British Psychological Society.

Publications:

ROCOCO project team: