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Published in: Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) 1/2008

01-02-2008

“What are We Missing?” Usability’s Indexical Ground

Authors: Alan Zemel, Timothy Koschmann, Curtis LeBaron, Paul Feltovich

Published in: Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) | Issue 1/2008

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Abstract

In this paper, we describe how usability provides the indexical ground upon which design work in a surgery is achieved. Indexical and deictic referential practices are used (1) to constitute participation frameworks and work sites in an instructional surgery and (2) to encode and manage participants’ differential access to the relevancies and background knowledge required for the achievement of a successful surgical outcome. As a site for both learning and work, the operating room afforded us the opportunity to examine how usability, which is a critical design consideration, can be used as a resource for learning in interaction. In our detailed analysis of the interaction among participants (both co-present and projected) we sought to describe a particular case of how usability was produced as a relevant consideration for surgical education in the operating room. In doing so, we demonstrate a set of members’ methods by which actors worked to establish and provide for the relevance of the anticipated needs of projected users as part of developing an understanding of their current activity.

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Footnotes
1
The data analyzed in this report came from the Southern Illinois University Surgical Education Video Corpus. Further information about this corpus can be found at the website of the Collaboration and Learning Laboratory (http://​www.​siumed.​edu/​CaLL/​).
 
2
Many examples of such ‘boundary objects’ can be seen in modern medical practice. Consider the practices of coordination employed by radiologists, surgeons, and pathologists in performing a simple breast biopsy. Prior to surgery, radiographic images are produced which demarcate the regions of tissue in question. A barbed needle is sometimes inserted by the radiologist to provide guidance to the surgeon in locating and defining this region. When the sample of tissue is excised, the surgeon may attach sutures to the specimen to display to the pathologist the orientation of the excised tissue with the patient’s body. It is only this mass of non-descript tissue that makes the tortuous journey across the boundaries of these different forms of practice.
 
3
The indexical ground for the question “What’s missing?” includes assumptions regarding not only the object that is not currently present but also implications regarding the actor or actors for whom the object’s absence and presence would be relevant. Thus the question has built into it the problem of identifying the boundary object that links their current work to the subsequent work of a future user. In this case, the boundary object is the AV fistula and the future user is the dialysis nurse.
 
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Metadata
Title
“What are We Missing?” Usability’s Indexical Ground
Authors
Alan Zemel
Timothy Koschmann
Curtis LeBaron
Paul Feltovich
Publication date
01-02-2008
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) / Issue 1/2008
Print ISSN: 0925-9724
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7551
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10606-007-9065-0

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