TY - GEN
T1 - Leashing the City
T2 - 8th International Conference on Animal-Computer Interaction, ACI 2021
AU - Sadetzki, Yaara
AU - Hirsch-Matsioulas, Orit
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 ACM.
PY - 2021/11/8
Y1 - 2021/11/8
N2 - This study examines the joint walking of people and dogs in the city, as an embodied practice mediated by a designed artifact - the leash. Shared walking of humans and dogs is not merely a form of spatial movement but also constitutes power relations. It assembles the dis/ability of an entity to move, choose its direction, rhythm or duration of movement. These complexities manifest through different forms of communication which usually remain unrecognized due to anthropocentric point of view. Based on multidisciplinary research conducted in Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel that was comprised of anthropological fieldwork and professional knowledge of dog behavior, we prove two main assertions. First, we refute the misconception that people gain exclusive control over dogs' movement and behavior by restraining them with a leash. Rather, we demonstrate that the leash creates a bi-directional medium of communication between humans and dogs. Second, we present the dog-leash-human unit as an entity in the social and spatial urban environment and its agency, as a whole, as well as each of its components. Thus, by investigating dog-leash-human movement we wish to contribute to the ACI body of knowledge dealing with multispecies nonverbal communication artifacts. Furthermore, delving into the multiple dog-leash-human entanglements can shed light on ACI aspirations to forge a user-centered non-anthropocentric research method.
AB - This study examines the joint walking of people and dogs in the city, as an embodied practice mediated by a designed artifact - the leash. Shared walking of humans and dogs is not merely a form of spatial movement but also constitutes power relations. It assembles the dis/ability of an entity to move, choose its direction, rhythm or duration of movement. These complexities manifest through different forms of communication which usually remain unrecognized due to anthropocentric point of view. Based on multidisciplinary research conducted in Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel that was comprised of anthropological fieldwork and professional knowledge of dog behavior, we prove two main assertions. First, we refute the misconception that people gain exclusive control over dogs' movement and behavior by restraining them with a leash. Rather, we demonstrate that the leash creates a bi-directional medium of communication between humans and dogs. Second, we present the dog-leash-human unit as an entity in the social and spatial urban environment and its agency, as a whole, as well as each of its components. Thus, by investigating dog-leash-human movement we wish to contribute to the ACI body of knowledge dealing with multispecies nonverbal communication artifacts. Furthermore, delving into the multiple dog-leash-human entanglements can shed light on ACI aspirations to forge a user-centered non-anthropocentric research method.
KW - Animal-computer Interaction
KW - Dog walking
KW - Dogs
KW - Human-canine relations
KW - Leash
KW - Multispecies ethnography
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85130802219&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/3493842.3493889
DO - 10.1145/3493842.3493889
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85130802219
T3 - ACM International Conference Proceeding Series
BT - ACI 2021 - 8th International Conference on Animal-Computer Interaction, Proceedings
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
Y2 - 8 November 2021 through 11 November 2021
ER -