Digital product memories enable novel item-centric ways of communication along a product's lifecycle. With respect to the open nature of the scenario ranging from manufacturer to consumer, the expectations for such digital product memories are diverse. This chapter gives a brief summary of empirical studies with (potential) end-users of digital product memories. It combines information we acquired at three different public IT and industrial fairs in 2009 and 2010 with a total of 515 visitors, a user study conducted with 27 participants of a shopping cart scenario at the Innovative Retail Lab and an experiment with 12 students concerning working group support from so-called artifact memories. We compiled our observations into five hypotheses concerning aspects of digital product memory ranging from technical constraints to preferred applications.
%0 Book Section
%1 MeixnerKroenerKahl13p381
%A Meixner, Gerrit
%A Kröner, Alexander
%A Kahl, Gerrit
%B SemProM: Foundations of Semantic Product Memories for the Internet of Things
%C Heidelberg
%D 2013
%E Wahlster, Wolfgang
%I Springer
%K v1205 springer paper embedded ai sensor product information rfid user requirements zzz.spm
%P 381-400
%R 10.1007/978-3-642-37377-0_23
%T A Summary of End-User Feedback on Digital Product Memories
%X Digital product memories enable novel item-centric ways of communication along a product's lifecycle. With respect to the open nature of the scenario ranging from manufacturer to consumer, the expectations for such digital product memories are diverse. This chapter gives a brief summary of empirical studies with (potential) end-users of digital product memories. It combines information we acquired at three different public IT and industrial fairs in 2009 and 2010 with a total of 515 visitors, a user study conducted with 27 participants of a shopping cart scenario at the Innovative Retail Lab and an experiment with 12 students concerning working group support from so-called artifact memories. We compiled our observations into five hypotheses concerning aspects of digital product memory ranging from technical constraints to preferred applications.
@incollection{MeixnerKroenerKahl13p381,
abstract = {Digital product memories enable novel item-centric ways of communication along a product's lifecycle. With respect to the open nature of the scenario ranging from manufacturer to consumer, the expectations for such digital product memories are diverse. This chapter gives a brief summary of empirical studies with (potential) end-users of digital product memories. It combines information we acquired at three different public {IT} and industrial fairs in 2009 and 2010 with a total of 515 visitors, a user study conducted with 27 participants of a shopping cart scenario at the Innovative Retail Lab and an experiment with 12 students concerning working group support from so-called artifact memories. We compiled our observations into five hypotheses concerning aspects of digital product memory ranging from technical constraints to preferred applications.},
added-at = {2013-06-08T14:31:35.000+0200},
address = {Heidelberg},
author = {Meixner, Gerrit and Kr{\"o}ner, Alexander and Kahl, Gerrit},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/20299037d61b2d3f11ccac4ea1164cd62/flint63},
booktitle = {SemProM: Foundations of Semantic Product Memories for the Internet of Things},
crossref = {Wahlster2013},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-37377-0_23},
editor = {Wahlster, Wolfgang},
groups = {public},
interhash = {c96bdf38a56059b64eabed7d348a9979},
intrahash = {1dd5172f2ecf282dadd3629eaef6d232},
keywords = {v1205 springer paper embedded ai sensor product information rfid user requirements zzz.spm},
pages = {381-400},
publisher = {Springer},
timestamp = {2015-03-05T14:12:51.000+0100},
title = {A Summary of End-User Feedback on Digital Product Memories},
username = {flint63},
year = 2013
}