Design for Longevity: Ongoing Use of Instruments from NIME 2010-14
Fabio Morreale, and Andrew McPherson
Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression
- Year: 2017
- Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
- Pages: 192–197
- DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1176218 (Link to paper)
- PDF link
Abstract:
Every new edition of NIME brings dozens of new DMIs and the feeling that only a few of them will eventually break through. Previous work tried to address this issue with a deductive approach by formulating design frameworks; we addressed this issue with a inductive approach by elaborating on successes and failures of previous DMIs. We contacted 97 DMI makers that presented a new instrument at five successive editions of NIME (2010-2014); 70 answered. They were asked to indicate the original motivation for designing the DMI and to present information about its uptake. Results confirmed that most of the instruments have difficulties establishing themselves. Also, they were asked to reflect on the specific factors that facilitated and those that hindered instrument longevity. By grounding these reflections on existing reserach on NIME and HCI, we propose a series of design considerations for future DMIs.
Citation:
Fabio Morreale, and Andrew McPherson. 2017. Design for Longevity: Ongoing Use of Instruments from NIME 2010-14. Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.1176218BibTeX Entry:
@inproceedings{fmorreale2017, abstract = {Every new edition of NIME brings dozens of new DMIs and the feeling that only a few of them will eventually break through. Previous work tried to address this issue with a deductive approach by formulating design frameworks; we addressed this issue with a inductive approach by elaborating on successes and failures of previous DMIs. We contacted 97 DMI makers that presented a new instrument at five successive editions of NIME (2010-2014); 70 answered. They were asked to indicate the original motivation for designing the DMI and to present information about its uptake. Results confirmed that most of the instruments have difficulties establishing themselves. Also, they were asked to reflect on the specific factors that facilitated and those that hindered instrument longevity. By grounding these reflections on existing reserach on NIME and HCI, we propose a series of design considerations for future DMIs. }, address = {Copenhagen, Denmark}, author = {Fabio Morreale and Andrew McPherson}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression}, doi = {10.5281/zenodo.1176218}, issn = {2220-4806}, pages = {192--197}, publisher = {Aalborg University Copenhagen}, title = {Design for Longevity: Ongoing Use of Instruments from NIME 2010-14}, url = {http://www.nime.org/proceedings/2017/nime2017_paper0036.pdf}, year = {2017} }