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Representing Collections as Compositions to support distributed creative cognition and situated creative learning

Authors: A. Kerne a; E. Koh a
Affiliation:   a Interface Ecology Lab, Center for Study of Digital Libraries, Computer Science Department, Texas A&M University, TX, USA
DOI: 10.1080/13614560701711859
Publication Frequency: 3 issues per year
Published in: journal New Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia, Volume 13, Issue 2 January 2007 , pages 135 - 162
Formats available: HTML (English) : PDF (English)
Previously published as: Hypermedia (0955-8543) until 1995
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Abstract

We investigate how the creativity support tool combinFormation supports the creativity-oriented course, The Design Process, by representing collections as compositions. Undergraduate students in The Design Process are charged with working in interdisciplinary teams to develop new inventions. combinFormation is a mixed-initiative system that integrates browsing, searching, representing, manipulating, and collecting digital information resources, using the form of the visual composition space. Students use the composition space to develop collections of prior work that support their creative processes of developing new inventions. A quantitative study shows the overall effect of mixed-initiative composition on the performance of student groups on creative projects. To understand the mechanisms of situated creativity support, we follow-up with case-study interviews of two project teams. We develop the frameworks of distributed creative cognition and situated creative learning to analyse the interview data. We find that the mixed-initiative capabilities of procedural generation and human manipulability of visual information representations in the composition space support distributed creative cognition and situated creative learning.
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