TY - JOUR
T1 - Crafting shape-changing experiences
T2 - emotional evaluation of morphing metamaterials
AU - Levy, Tamar
AU - Erel, Hadas
AU - Zuckerman, Oren
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2024/1/1
Y1 - 2024/1/1
N2 - We introduce a novel approach to evaluate how the design properties of morphing metamaterial influence shape-changing experiences. We leverage parametric design to create cutting patterns that change the Density and Geometry material properties. Using laser-cutting, we apply the patterns to a non-stretchable woven textile, resulting in a stretchable metamaterial that we actuate using an electromagnetic coil. This systematic design approach leads to programmatic control over the material movement, making it suitable for controlled evaluation of perceived experience. In a 2×2 mixed-method study, we assess how the metamaterial’s Density and Geometry properties impact the observed experience. Our findings indicate that such changes significantly and independently affect participants’ perceived emotions, mood, associations, and preferences. Our research contributes to the body of work of systematic studies in the shape-changing community. By using our morphing metamaterial design and implementation technique, coupled with our controlled evaluation of specific design properties, we have revealed new insights about the influencing factors of shape-changing experiences. We have incorporated these insights into our morphing metamaterial design guidelines, which outline the impact of Density and Geometry properties on an observer’s perceived emotions. We hope our work will open up new possibilities for expressive, evocative metamaterial-focused shape-changing experiences.
AB - We introduce a novel approach to evaluate how the design properties of morphing metamaterial influence shape-changing experiences. We leverage parametric design to create cutting patterns that change the Density and Geometry material properties. Using laser-cutting, we apply the patterns to a non-stretchable woven textile, resulting in a stretchable metamaterial that we actuate using an electromagnetic coil. This systematic design approach leads to programmatic control over the material movement, making it suitable for controlled evaluation of perceived experience. In a 2×2 mixed-method study, we assess how the metamaterial’s Density and Geometry properties impact the observed experience. Our findings indicate that such changes significantly and independently affect participants’ perceived emotions, mood, associations, and preferences. Our research contributes to the body of work of systematic studies in the shape-changing community. By using our morphing metamaterial design and implementation technique, coupled with our controlled evaluation of specific design properties, we have revealed new insights about the influencing factors of shape-changing experiences. We have incorporated these insights into our morphing metamaterial design guidelines, which outline the impact of Density and Geometry properties on an observer’s perceived emotions. We hope our work will open up new possibilities for expressive, evocative metamaterial-focused shape-changing experiences.
KW - design guidelines
KW - emotional experience
KW - morphing materials
KW - Shape-changing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85204027436&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/07370024.2024.2399013
DO - 10.1080/07370024.2024.2399013
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85204027436
SN - 0737-0024
JO - Human-Computer Interaction
JF - Human-Computer Interaction
ER -