This work explores embodied mobile information practices through a photo-diary and interview study with nineteen smartphone users. We qualitatively analyze 234 diary entries and one hundred descriptions of diary entries to explore how mobile devices, specifically smartphones, facilitate embodied information seeking and production, drawing insights about the use of mobile devices as nonverbal communication tools. In addition, we probe the notion of smart-phones as an extension of the human body, and ways in which the affordances of these devices (e.g., portability, convenience) support and interrupt information practices. In particular, we observe that mobile devices are not only perceived as extensions of the mind and body, but are embedded...
Information and communications technologies (ICTs) are permeating modern lifestyles, shaping and col...
Handheld media and communications technologies are becoming increasingly composite interfaces, combi...
As smartphones become ubiquitous, they increasingly influence the way in which students seek and use...
This paper offers a phenomenological account of our relationship to our smartphones rooted in the wo...
User-based research into the lived experiences associated with smartphone camera practices – in part...
This article introduces our mobile diary method, a qualitative method for the study of mobile phone ...
In this paper we will discuss the analysis of smart phone log data as an expression of everyday life...
This article proposes that the affective processes that shape our relationship to the world of digit...
The escalation of photo sharing through social networking sites is one of the most substantial chang...
Mobile technology, primarily via smartphones, has become increasingly ubiquitous in the modern world...
Purpose – This paper examines the value of mobile phones in ethnographic research, and seeks to dem...
This article proposes that the affective processes that shape our relationship to the world of digit...
"December 2013.""A Thesis presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School at the University of Misso...
Smartphones are often spontaneously used for personal purposes and during face-to-face gatherings. N...
Recent critiques contend that “Far too much current writing on photography—even in pieces about soci...
Information and communications technologies (ICTs) are permeating modern lifestyles, shaping and col...
Handheld media and communications technologies are becoming increasingly composite interfaces, combi...
As smartphones become ubiquitous, they increasingly influence the way in which students seek and use...
This paper offers a phenomenological account of our relationship to our smartphones rooted in the wo...
User-based research into the lived experiences associated with smartphone camera practices – in part...
This article introduces our mobile diary method, a qualitative method for the study of mobile phone ...
In this paper we will discuss the analysis of smart phone log data as an expression of everyday life...
This article proposes that the affective processes that shape our relationship to the world of digit...
The escalation of photo sharing through social networking sites is one of the most substantial chang...
Mobile technology, primarily via smartphones, has become increasingly ubiquitous in the modern world...
Purpose – This paper examines the value of mobile phones in ethnographic research, and seeks to dem...
This article proposes that the affective processes that shape our relationship to the world of digit...
"December 2013.""A Thesis presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School at the University of Misso...
Smartphones are often spontaneously used for personal purposes and during face-to-face gatherings. N...
Recent critiques contend that “Far too much current writing on photography—even in pieces about soci...
Information and communications technologies (ICTs) are permeating modern lifestyles, shaping and col...
Handheld media and communications technologies are becoming increasingly composite interfaces, combi...
As smartphones become ubiquitous, they increasingly influence the way in which students seek and use...