Abstract
The development of artificial intelligence has broken through the previous assumption that “human is the only actor,” and interactive haptic technology has become a new actor, bringing users realistic visual and auditory experiences. However, with the continuous improvement of people’s requirements for green and healthy living standards, consumer demand has reflected the characteristics of diversification and high quality. Consumers have more specific requests for product quality, variety, flavor, and a growing environment. They also pay more attention to their experience and the sense of engagement when using PC intelligence. The current human-computer interaction design only focuses on human materiality, human-environment interaction, and barrier-free dimensions. In other words, less attention is paid to the existence of other “non-human” beings and the human-natural world entangled with humans, which probably leads to the fact that multi-species intelligent design has not obtained a specific development space to some extent. Based on the field investigation of two cases, this study tries to rediscover the sustainable energy that has long been forgotten, abandoned, and scattered in marginalized locations since the development of advanced technology. Combined with existing research on human-computer interaction design, it points out that the “non-human” voice, emotion, and power temporarily obscured are not only an essential part of Multimodal human–computer interaction design but also the development of immersive and exploratory and emotional experiences for users. It provides a new space to capture social facts’ “authenticity” and “aura” meanings. Meanwhile, the research also points out that introducing human interaction technology can make up for what users cannot perceive and see with their senses. In conclusion, an intelligent design framework for understanding multi-species is put forward, which could be helpful in general design in the domain of human-computer interaction. Also, provide a design dimension for the sustainable development of our society.
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Hua, G., Gao, T., Zhang, X., Zhou, H. (2023). All Things Coexist Without Harming Each Other-A Growing Research in Multi-species Intelligent Design. In: Stephanidis, C., Antona, M., Ntoa, S., Salvendy, G. (eds) HCI International 2023 Posters. HCII 2023. Communications in Computer and Information Science, vol 1832. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35989-7_9
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