Ethnocomputing is the study of the interactions between computing and culture. It is carried out through theoretical analysis, empirical investigation, and design implementation. It includes research on the impact of computing on society, as well as the reverse: how cultural, historical, personal, and societal origins and surroundings cause and affect the innovation, development, diffusion, maintenance, and appropriation of computational artifacts or ideas. From the ethnocomputing perspective, no computational technology is culturally "neutral," and no cultural practice is a computational void. Instead of considering culture to be a hindrance for software engineering, culture should be seen as a resource for innovation and design.
Subject matter
Social categories for ethnocomputing include:
Indigenous computing: In some cases, ethnocomputing "translates" from indigenous culture to high tech frameworks: for example, analyzing the African board game Owari as a one-dimensional cellular automaton.
Social/historical studies of computing: In other cases ethnocomputing seeks to identify the social, cultural, historical, or personal dimensions of high tech computational ideas and artifacts: for example, the relationship between the Turing Test and Alan Turing's closeted gay identity.
Appropriation in computing: lay persons who did not participate in the original design of a computing system can still affect it by modifying its interpretation, use, or structure. Such "modding" may be as subtle as the key board character "emoticons" created through lay use of email, or as blatant as the stylized customization of computer cases.
Equity tools: a software "Applications Quest" has been developed for generating a "diversity index" that allows consideration of multiple identity characteristics in college admissions.
Technical categories in ethnocomputing include:
Organized structures and models used to represent information (data structures)
Ways of manipulating the organized information (algorithms)
Linguistic realizations of computation (theories of computation)
Mechanical realizations of computation (computational tools)
User interfaces
Internationalization and localization
Cultural HCI
Uses of computational tools (uses)
Ethnotechnology
Origins
Ethnocomputing has its origins in ethnomathematics. There are a large number of studies in ethnomathematics that could be considered ethnocomputing as well (e.g., Eglash (1999) and Ascher & Ascher (1981)). The idea of a separate field was introduced in 1992 by Anthony Petrillo in Responsive Evaluation of Mathematics Education in a Community of Jos, Nigeria, Dissertation (Ph.D.): State University of New York at Buffalo, which Petrillo elaborated a bit more on in March 1994, Ethnocomputers in Nigerian Computer Education, paper presented at the 31st Annual Conference of the Mathematical Association of Nigeria. Just like computer science is nowadays considered to be a field of research distinct from mathematics, ethnocomputing is considered to be a research topic distinct from ethnomathematics. Some aspects of ethnocomputing that have their roots in ethnomathematics are listed below:
Counting and sorting: The use of a systematic way to compare and order discrete objects
Locating: Exploring one's spatial environment and conceptualizing and symbolizing that environment with models, maps, drawings, and other devices
Measuring: Quantifying qualities like length and weight for the purposes of, for instance, comparing, classifying, or ordering objects
Designing: Applying formal or non-formal algorithmic or computational ideas in arts or design
Playing: Devising and engaging in games and pastimes with more or less formalized rules that all players must abide by
Explaining: Finding systematic ways to represent phenomena or the relationships between phenomena
Further reading
Eglash, Ron (1999) African Fractals: Modern Computing and Indigenous Design. New Brunswick, New Jersey, and London: Rutgers University Press.
Ascher, Marcia & Ascher, Robert (1981) Mathematics of the Incas: Code of the Quipu.
Tedre, Matti; Sutinen, Erkki; Kähkönen, Esko; Kommers, Piet (2006) Ethnocomputing: ICT in Social and Cultural Context. Communications of the ACM 49(1):pp. 126–130
Petrillo, Anthony (1994, March). Ethnocomputers in Nigerian Computer Education. Paper presented at the 31st Annual Conference of the Mathematical Association of Nigeria.
External links
Applications Quest Juan Gilbert's tool for diversity in college admissions
AADMLSS The African-American Distributed Multiple Learning Styles System
CSDT Culturally Situated Design Tools
Engineering with Social Metaphors A one-day theme of the "Socially Inspired Computing Symposium," University of Hertfordshire, April 2005.
Ron Eglash: The fractals at the heart of African designs TED Talk
Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics
Graduate Studies in Mathematics
Hellenica World - Scientific Library
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/"
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License