Technical Affordance Projects (TAPs)

The 'Technical Affordance Projects' (TAPs) take digital technologies as the object of interdisciplinary inquiry.

These projects engage critically with the technical materialities and affordances of each technology, and sociodigital futures that are ‘in the making’. We explore the complexities and contingencies of human-technology entanglement and aim to re-script sociodigital configurations through intervention and experimentation. The four Technical Affordance Projects are:

The overall leads for the Technical Affordance Projects (TAPs) are Professor Susan Halford (Sociology) and Professor Kirsten Cater (Computer Science). 

These technical fields have been selected because – individually and together – they are central to current sociodigital innovations. They are also interlinked with many of the sociodigital futures in the making in the Centre’s Domains of Sociodigital Practice (caring, consuming, moving, learning and organising).

Each project has three phases:

  1. Critical investigation of the social construction and technical affordances in each field; how these are represented, by whom, for what sociodigital futures; linked to related investigations and findings in each Domain of Sociodigital Practice; and informed through collaborative activities with partner organisations.
  2. Responding to recent calls for action amid the complexities and contingencies of human-technology entanglement, each project is developing a suite of co-created sociodigital interventions and experimentations based on initial findings from the Domains of Sociodigital Practice and underpinned by expertise from the ‘Threads’
  3. Through a focus on ‘re-scripting’ technical affordances and wider sociodigital configurations to enable fair and sustainable futures, the projects are developing demonstration content for outreach and impact through a Centre Roadshow, planned for year 5. 

People

Find out who works in the Technical Affordance Projects team.

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Research

Find out more about our wider programme of research.

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