TY - JOUR AB - Nowadays, automation not only dominates industry but becomes more and more a part of our private, everyday lives. Following the notion of increased convenience and more time for the "important things in life”, automation relieves us from many daily household chores – robots vacuum floors and automated coffeemakers produce supposedly barista-quality coffee on the press of a button. In many cases these offers are embraced by people without further questioning. Of course, automation frees us from many unloved activities, but we may also lose something by delegating more and more everyday activities to automation. In a series of four studies, we explored the experiential costs of everyday automation and strategies of how to design technology to reconcile experience with the advantages of ever more powerful automation. AU - Klapperich, Holger AU - Uhde, Alarith AU - Hassenzahl, Marc DA - 2019 DO - 10.25819/ubsi/9894 KW - Wohlbefinden KW - Home automation KW - Design for wellbeing KW - Meaningful experiences KW - Automation from below LA - eng PY - 2019 TI - Understanding and designing automation with peoples' wellbeing in mind UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hbz:467-18848 Y2 - 2024-12-26T08:04:50 ER -