At the Interface: Opening a Debate on the Future of Interfaces

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30682/diid7421c

Keywords:

Interfaces, Artificial Intelligence, Interaction Design, Human-Machine Interaction

Abstract

Human-machine interaction (HMI) is a multilayered discipline that includes the study of human factors, engineering and interaction design. By its own definition HMI brings together heterogenous design challenges that cross multiple domains.

Radical innovation in the field of machine learning, material science, manufacturing processes, sensing and actuating systems are rapidly transforming the way we interact with technology: computers are disappearing into everyday objects, products and systems are becoming more autonomous and proactive, and new interaction techniques are able to capture the richness of the human body expressivity.

In this paper, we propose the interface as the material and conceptual place where the novel challenges of HMI should be addressed and solved.

Our goal is to open a debate on the centrality of the interface design in industrial design and on the establishment of a multidisciplinary framework to synthesize technological, cognitive, social, cultural, and economic instances.

Author Biographies

Alessandro Pollini, BSD Design

Interaction designer and researcher with experience in EU R&D projects. He is Senior Researcher in Industrial Design, expert in Interaction Design, HMI and Cognitive Ergonomics. He teaches at the University of Bologna, the University of the Republic of San Marino, and the International Telematic University Uninettuno.

Leonardo Giusti, Google ATAP

Head of Design at Google ATAP (Advanced Technologies and Projects), working on Project Soli and Project Jacquard. Before joining Google, he led design teams at Sano, Samsung Design America and MIT — Design Lab. His work has been featured in the New York Times, Washington Post, Wired, Fast Company.

Published

2021-11-18

How to Cite

Pollini, A., & Giusti, L. . (2021). At the Interface: Opening a Debate on the Future of Interfaces. Diid — Disegno Industriale Industrial Design, (74), 10. https://doi.org/10.30682/diid7421c