100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Samenvatting - Interactive Media and Entertainment

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
36
Uploaded on
20-12-2025
Written in
2022/2023

Samenvatting les 1 - les 6 (info powerpoints) Lecture 1: Introduction Lecture 2: Mediated social interactions I: computer-mediated communication Lecture 3: Mediated social interactions I: mobile communication Lecture 4: Mediated social interactions I: mobile communication part 2 Lecture 5: Online dating Lecture 6: personalized media environments and self-tracking

Show more Read less
Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
December 20, 2025
Number of pages
36
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Lecture 1: Introduction

A digital society?
¡ Interactive and entertainment media are deeply integrated into our everyday life
¡ They have significantly altered ‘the way we do things’
§ Changes in our individual lives
§ Changes in our society

What is interactivity?

Affordances theory

à is interactivity a technological affordance?

What are technological affordances?
¡ “Perceptions of an object’s utility, its possibilities for enabling (& constraining) human
action” (Gibson, 1986)

® Functional view
® Relational view
® Contextual view

The affordances checklist
Three threshold criteria to be an affordance:
¡ Criteria #1: neither the object nor a feature of the object
the relationship between person and object means that “affordances neither belong
to the environment nor the individual, but rather to the relationship between
individuals and their perceptions of environments”
¡ Criteria #2: not the outcome
Cf. unintended consequences// Function Creep
¡ Criteria #3: has variability
Features are present or absent
Affordances are gradual (technologies can vary in the extent to which they ‘afford’
something)

An object or technology is well-designed when its affordances are readily and easily perceivable
from its features

Technological features and affordances
Interactivity is an affordance that users can perceive when the structural features of a
technological interface are well-designed.

As a side note …
Affordances remains a fuzzy concept, that is often misused… you may notice this when
processing literature on digital culture (perhaps also the literature for this course)…




1

,Interactivity: an individual in interaction with technology

Individuals ‘in interaction’ with technology
¡ What is the psychology of interactivity?
¡ In other words:
When individuals interact with technology…
Where is interactivity situated?
¡ What are its psychological effects?
¡ Is there between- and within-person variability?

Interactivity as ‘communication’
¡ When a user interacts with a technology…
§ They interact with an ‘interface’

Where is interactivity situated?

At the level of the source, the medium and the message Variability in interactivity = to what
extent can the source, medium and message be altered by the user?




Level of medium: modality interactivity
In what modality is the message processed?
¡ Modality interactivity:
§ Number of modalities present in one medium
§ Multi-mediality: extent to which modalities are simultaneously active
¡ Each modality and each combination of different modalities has a different influence on
the amount of perceptual bandwidth utilized.
¡ Extent to which sensory channels must operate together to build a mental representation

At the level of the source
¡ To what degree can users customize and personalize (‘tailor’)?

® Sourceness: Who did the customization (user, news editors, friend, …), and can users
manipulate this?
® Degree of customization:
LOW (e.g., filter content based on preferences) to HIGH (e.g., generate content) Often
achieved through ‘tailoring’: information is matched with and filtered according to unique
aspects of the self
à user customization enhances sense of agency



2

,At the level of the message
¡ To what extent are exchanges contingent upon previous exchanges?
§ Non-interactive
§ Reactive – message is a direct response
§ Responsive – messages are threaded together in a coherent sequence


Model of interactivity effects




Interactivity paradoxes:
The effects of interactivity at the level of the source, modality and message are not
straightforward:
- More = not always better
- Cognitive, attitudinal and behavioral effects may not align


1. Where is interactivity situated à Modality, Source, & Message
2. Psychological effects on user engagement à cognitive processing of the message, attitudes
towards message/ technology, behavior in interface
3. Differences à novel vs. experienced, involvement with content, …


Types of media discussed in this course
3 broad groups:
1. Communication technologies
2. Self-tracking technologies
3. Entertainment technologies

Interactive media and society

Impact on society
¡ How interactive media ‘work’ in relation to the psychology of the individual is one thing,
but what are the broader implications of their integration into society?
¡ How have they altered ‘how we do things’?




3

, Society and social structures
¡ Sociologists examine the Social Structures of society
= patterns in the ways in which people organize themselves These patterns shape the
ways in which people (can) behave
¡ In other words… social structures enable and constrain human action (Giddens, 1984)
¡ But… there is also human agency = an individual’s capacity to reflect on structures, to
reproduce, but also adapt, challenge and resist them
¡ This ‘duality’ between structure and agency is an interplay that oftentimes reveals how
power is distributed and negotiated in society

Okay… but why is this relevant for this course?
¡ Social structures are prescriptive: they specify a way of ‘doing things’ (Giddens, 1984) – in
other words: they make it logical to organize things repeatedly and systematically in a
certain manner
¡ There are also such ‘logics’ present in media technologies:
§ ‘Apparatgeist: the “spirit of the machine” (Katz & Aakhus, 2002, p. 305): There are
logics prescribed by the technology that direct human behavior – not in a
deterministic way, but rather by providing humans with both a “rationality of
means” (p. 306) and “constraint upon possibilities” (p. 307).
§ In other words: affordances (!!!) that enable and constrain

Hence: interactive & entertainment media
Through their affordances…
§ …technologies can directly lead to new social structures in society, when technologies
introduce new ways of doing things, changing how we organize aspects of everyday life
§ …technologies can directly reproduce or affect existing social structures in society
1. Reproducing social structures
§ Through their affordances, technologies can contribute to …
o Social change in the social structures in society
§ the reproduction of social structures in society
o New ways of doing things that emphasize the status quo;

Key concepts
¡ Technological affordances
¡ Functional, relational, contextual
¡ Threshold criteria for affordances
¡ Features vs. affordances
¡ Function creep, unintended consequences
¡ Interactivity at the level of the medium, source, message
¡ Model of interactivity effects
¡ Cognitive, attitudinal & behavioral effects of interactivity
¡ Social structures
¡ Agency
¡ Duality of structure and agency
¡ Interactive and entertainment media as contributors to social change – or to
reproducing social structures – through their capacity to make us do things in new ways




4
$5.50
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
lottecauliez1

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
lottecauliez1 Universiteit Gent
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
New on Stuvia
Member since
1 month
Number of followers
0
Documents
6
Last sold
-

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions