Litcius/Paper detail

Practicing Without a License: Design Research as Psychotherapy

Tad Hirsch

202027 citationsDOI

Abstract

This paper considers the potential for participants to experience psychotherapeutic effects through their involvement in design research. Drawing on literature in human-computer interaction, psychotherapy, and feminist sociology, I argue that vulnerable participants may experience qualitative interviews therapeutically when they engage in reflexive activity about sensitive topics with researchers who employ psychotherapeutic techniques that encourage disclosure and reflection. I discuss ethical concerns and suggest the need for trauma-informed research practices, updated consent procedures, and revised pedagogy that better support researchers and participants engaged in emotionally charged encounters.

Topics & Concepts

ReflexivityLicenseQualitative researchPsychotherapistReflection (computer programming)PsychologyInformed consentEngineering ethicsEthical issuesMedical educationSociologyComputer scienceMedicineEngineeringAlternative medicineOperating systemPathologySocial scienceProgramming languageInnovative Human-Technology InteractionFocus Groups and Qualitative MethodsPersona Design and Applications