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The Role of Tangible Interaction to Communicate Tacit Knowledge of Built Heritage

Research Authors
Eslam Nofal, Rabee M. Reffat, Vanessa Boschloos, Hendrik Hameeuw, Andrew Vande Moere
Research Member
Research Year
2018
Research Journal
Heritage
Research Publisher
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Research Vol
1 (2)
Research Rank
1
Research_Pages
414-436
Research Website
https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage1020028
Research Abstract

Meanings and values of built heritage vary from factual and explicit meanings which are relatively easy to present, to more tacit knowledge, which is typically more challenging to communicate due to its implicit and often abstract character. In this paper, we investigate how tangible interaction influences the communication of this tacit knowledge of built heritage, and how it affects the experience of visitors. Through a between-group comparative study in a real-world museum context, we examined how the tangible characteristics of an interactive prototype museum installation influence how visitors perceive a particular story containing tacit heritage knowledge. The communicated story relates a historical journey in ancient Egypt to the physical and architectural characteristics of the entrance colonnade at the Djoser Complex in Saqqara. Our experimental conditions consisted of an interactive navigation (input) and a passive representation (output) components, ranging from traditional digital displays to fully tangible means of interaction. We report on our findings, which showed various differences and commonalities between our three experimental conditions.
We conclude with a number of discussion points and design recommendations: (a) to strive for balance between navigation and representation modalities in terms of affordance and the required cognitive effort; (b) to take advantage of physical representation and grasping, such as conveying particular physical details and characteristics; and (c) to consider design aspects of embodiment, physical abstraction and materiality for future research or potential further development of communicating the meanings and values of heritage.