Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Committee offically approved

Today, I received an email saying:

Congratulations! Thesis proposals and committee members have been approved...Committee members have been notified. Students/advisors will receive an
email once the reader completes his/her review in the database.
Sweet!

Flat marine


Chris just sent me a link to a Boston.com article about a marine, Brett Davis who "meets his flat twin", Flat Brett, during a seven-month deployment to Iraq earlier this year. The article says:

"Flat Brett" is a small cardboard cutout doll of Lance Cpl. Brett Davis, made by one of his mother's co-workers at Basic Systems Inc., an engineering and automation firm.

Carman Friday said she got the idea after learning that local schools were participating in the "Flat Stanley" project in which students mail around a paper doll and keep a journal of its travels.

In a similar vein, Flat Brett was photographed as he went around to family functions and was taken along on a business trip to Texas.

For those of you who haven't yet read my thesis proposal, the thesis project that I am proposing is, similarly to Flat Brett, directly influenced by the Flat Stanley Project, as well as by the Traveling Gnome Prank. The basic concept is to make children more engaged in their parent's trip by staging a story in which a doll is traveling instead of, or together with, the parent.

Let's just hope it works.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

First draft

I just submitted the first draft of my thesis proposal today. I also announced my three readers and thesis committee members: Dr. William (Bill) Gaver, Dr. Rosalind (Roz) Picard , and last but not least my advisor, Principal Research Scientist Chris Schmandt.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Abstract

In recent decades, families in the Western world have become more geographically distributed, making it more difficult for family members to achieve and maintain a feeling of connectedness. Different time zones and contexts and a limited awareness of the other family members’ availability and mood are some of many factors that make “being together” more challenging when physically apart. Modern communication technologies, such as phones, Instant Messenger (IM) clients, and text messaging, improve communication, but seldom achieve the same level of connectedness and awareness that face-to-face communication does. In addition, when it comes to young children, these communication technologies may not even be an option. As a result, many families simply accept the fact that being apart leads to fragmented, or even non-existent, interaction.

For this thesis, I propose to design and evaluate a system that improves the experience of remote interaction and awareness between children and their parents. The main goal of the project is to develop a system that makes geographically distributed families feel more attached and connected than is possible with existing technology. Although I aim to enhance the experience for both parties, the child and the parent, the system will first and foremost be designed with young children’s perception of the world in mind.

The thesis project will consist of two main parts. I will start by exploring the realm of family telepresence by interviewing a number of families that consist of both young children and frequently traveling parents. The exact layout of the system will then be designed on the basis of the initial results. The main questions are:

(1) What content and information about the remote location is useful to children?,

(2) How should that information be presented?,

and, last but not least,

(3) How should the system be designed in order to encourage bi-directional communication and continuity?

A final user-study will be conducted at the end of the project.

Globetoddler is finally live



Globetoddler is the official name of my current Master of Sciences thesis, conducted at the MIT Media Lab. It is also the name of this blog, which I decided to create in order to keep track of and get feedback on my thoughts and progress, as the project proceeds.

So, if you have any comments or questions regarding the things I publish here, please don't hesitate to comment the blog post, or send an email to paulina [at] media [dot] mit [dot] edu.