Track 1

Track 1

Track 2

Track 2

Track 3

Track 3

Track 4

Track 4

Track 5

Track 5

Top

2018

Eskilstuna

Sweden

TRACK 1

PRACTICE-BASED INNOVATION AND QUALITY IMPROVEMENT

While innovation creates variation and brakes stability to be effective on the cost of efficiency, quality management is in practice used to ensuring low variation and high stability to achieve efficiency on the cost of effectiveness. This track brings together experiences of organizing and facilitating practice-based innovation with attempts to ensure quality improvement.

Track Chairs

Anders Fundin, Mälardalen University

Henry Larsen, University of Southern Denmark

Quality And Innovation In Public Procurement Of Railway Infrastructure Maintenance

PDF

Jens Aldenlöv, Tina Karrbom Gustavsson, Bjarne Bergquist, Peter Stöderholm, and Per-Erik Eriksson

1-5

Prototyping A Continuous Improvement And Innovation Program

PDF

Christina Villefrance Møller

6-13

Strategies For Emergent Quality Improvement

PDF

Anders Fundin

14-20

What Quality Management Can Learn From Designers About Being Qualitative

PDF

Johan Lilja, Camilla Abrahamsson, Klas Palm, and Christer Hedlund

21-28

Partnerships For Work Place Learning In Work Integrating Social Enterprizes

PDF

Erik Rosell and Joacim Rosenlund

29-35

Softlanding: Service Co-Development For A Child Health Care Clinic

PDF

Matti Luhtala, Johanna Lappi-Ramula, Miika Lehtinen, Teemu Kataja, and Jonas Vos

36-43

Need Of Understanding How To Enhance Innovation At Early Phases Of Production System Development

PDF

Yuji Yamamoto

44-51

Capacity Development For Innovation In The Public Sector

PDF

Klas Palm

52-60

Learnings From Building A Research Institute As A Neural Network

PDF

Anders Wikström and Helena Jerregård

61-67

Rich Business Framing

PDF

Erik Lindhult and Christer Nygren

68-77

Phronesis And Political Action In Management Development

PDF

Karina Solsø and Henry Larsen

78-86

From Theatre Improvisation To Video Scenes – What Are The Implications For The Quality Of Existential Conversation

PDF

Henry Larsen, Preben Friis, Elisabeth Assing Hvidt, Niels Christian Hvidt, Connie Timmermann, Lilli Sørensen, and Jette Ammentorp

87-94

TRACK 2

PARTICIPATORY INNOVATION IN HEALTH PRACTICES

Due to pressures on welfare services and health provision (ageing, chronic diseases) there is a need to develop new health practices. These innovations may involve the use of emergent technologies, change through patient involvement, organisational learning, or the rethinking of health policies. The track is all about innovation and change in work processes and the participation of patients, relatives, health professionals.

Track Chairs

Mia Folke, Mälardalen University

Thomas Markussen, University of Southern Denmark

Why Not Make It Simple? Written Messages In Drugs Worldwide

PDF

Benedita Camacho, João António Mota, and João Rui Pita

95-102

Design Thinking For The Implementation Of Innovations In

The Healthcare Sector

PDF

103-110

Klas Palm, Ulrika Persson-Fischier, and Malin Tistad

Living Lab: Format For Rehearsing A New (Service) Practice

PDF

Signe Louise Yndigegn and Marie Kirstejn Aakjær

111-119

Design For Redundancy In A Participatory Action That Helps Calibrating Hearing Devices

PDF

Luca Simeone

120-123

Video Tools To Support Patient Empowerment In Orthopaedic Revalidation

PDF

Stella Boess

124-129

TRACK 3

CREATIVE INTERACTION AND ARTISTIC PRACTICES IN WORKGROUP

In creative group processes, ideas and understanding emerges through social interaction. A fundamental challenge for workgroups’ creativity is how to enable a fruitful combination of differences - that all members contribute towards mutually shared goals. Artistic practices can help deal with challenging situations. This track creates a space for multi-voiced dialogue at the cross-roads of research and the arts.

Track Chairs

Anne Pässilä, Lappeenranta University of Technology Bengt Köping Olsson, Mälardalen University

Resonance Listening: A Concept To Help Address Worker Stress And Improve Communication And Creativity

PDF

Kristen Snyder

130-136

The Influence Of Music Experience And Body Movement Prior To Ideational Fluency

PDF

Peter Österberg and Bengt Köping Olsson

137-142

Insecure And Inefficient – Employees’ Experience Of Wickedness In Design Work

PDF

Katarina Wetter-Edman and Lisa Malmberg

143-145

State Flow, Creativity And Flow Synchronization During Group Based Problem Solving Task

PDF

Bengt Köping Olsson and László Harmat

146-153

A Dynamic Perspective On Group Creativity

PDF

Tomas Backström

154-161

A Dérive Encounter In Eskilstuna

PDF

Eva Marichalar-Freixa

162-166

Creativity – The Angel Or Devil In The Innovation Eden

PDF

Bengt Köping Olsson and Anna-Lena Carlsson

167-176

Provoked For Collaboration

PDF

Merja Salonen

177-182

Music In Disorder: Counterplay, Complexity And Collective Improvisation

PDF

Klas Nevrin

183-191

Collective Work Practices In Theatrical Rehearsals

PDF

Laura Lucia Parolin and Carmen Pellegrinelli

192-200

Beyond Text. Embodied Reading Of Data

PDF

Anne Pässilä, Allan Owens, Anu Laukkanen, Raquel Benmerqui, and Arja Lehto

201-207

Through The Membranes – Reflections On How We Depict Ideas For Innovation

PDF

Magnus Hoppe

208-218

TRACK 4

VISUAL REPRESENTATIONS IN PARTICIPATORY INNOVATION

Visual representations play multiple roles in innovation and design processes. Their value is not solely defined by their form, how they were developed, what they do and do not represent, but emerges in how they are introduced, used, and re-used. This track interrogates “visual representations in use” in participatory innovation: What they intend to represent, how they are generated, how they are used, and ways of evaluating their value in use.

Track Chairs

Jennie Schaeffer, Mälardalen University Koteshwar Chirumalla, Mälardalen University

Brendon Clark, Umeå University

Designing Participation With Talk Around An Organigram

PDF

Jane Webb

219-226

Storybraids: Material Exploration Of A Service System Visualization Technique

PDF

Stefan Holmlid

227-232

Generating Design Concepts: A Proposal To Uncover The Black Box

PDF

Bjarne Hindersson and Koteshwar Cirumalla

233-242

Towards A Framework Of Facilitation In Participatory Innovation: Group Collaboration Through Visual Guidance

PDF

Martin J. Eppler and Sebastian Kernbach

243-250

Unfolding Personal Stances On A Distant Climate Debate Through Probes

PDF

Stina Wessman and Lizette Reitsma

251-259

(Re)Innovating Preschools By Photo-Based Conversations With Children

PDF

Jennie Schaeffer, Mia Heikkilä, and Malin Lindberg

260-269

Complementary Representational Practices For Articulating Matters Of Concern

PDF

Lucia Crevani and Michela Cozza

270-279

Artefacts As Stotytellers Of New Nordic Design Thinking

PDF

Sara Said Mosleh

280-285

Object Theatre In Field Studies

PDF

Merja Ryöppy, Sofus Bach Poulsen, Pavels Konstantinovs, and Salu Ylirisku

286-293

Emergent Meaning & Innovative Insights With Figurines

PDF

Jacob Buur, Kristian Mortensen, Christina Fyhn Nielsen, and Johannes Wagner

294-302

Exploratory Workshop Using Abstract Collaging To Reflect On University-Society Collaborations

PDF

Laura Gottlieb

303-309

The Ethical Contract Of Using Online Participation From Vision Videos In Design

PDF

Peter Vistisen and Thessa Jensen

310-318

Complex Design Data Joined In Audiovisual Representation: Benefits And Issues In Analysis

PDF

Thorbjörn Swenberg

319-323

The Power And Peril Of Participant Video For Stakeholder Communication

PDF

Alexandra Mack, Wayne Pethrick, and Zhenan Hong

324-330

To Capture A Moment: Photo Elicitation In Participatory Design

PDF

Yvonne Erikson

331-337

TRACK 5

COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH ON PRODUCT DESIGN AND PRODUCTION INNOVATION

In innovation research, it is crucial to achieve both academic rigour and industrial relevance. One way is through collaborative research approaches that aim at co-creating knowledge. This track seeks to boost the understanding of collaborative research methods, in particular where researchers work with industry and external organisations to concurrently solve concrete problems and generate generic knowledge.

Track Chairs

Glenn Johansson, Mälardalen University

Kristina Säfsten, Jönköping University

Jacob Buur, University Of Southern Denmark

Down To Earth: From Environmental Abstraction To Action Using Interactive Research

PDF

Joacim Rosenlund and Erik Rosell

338-344

Towards A Structured Way To Represent Future Service Roles

PDF

Tim Overkamp and Stefan Holmlid

345-348

Towards Collaborative Knowledge Of The Resident Experience In Sustainable Renovation Processes

PDF

Stella Boess, Helena Keizer, and Sacha Silvester

349-354

Solving The Bottlenecks: The Craftsmanship Of Collaborative Research

PDF

Peter E. Johansson

355-359

Co-Developing Agile Stage-Gate In Danish Smes

PDF

Giulia Nardelli and Kasper Edwards

360-364

Research Quality In Collaborative Context

PDF

Erik Lindhult

365-375

Participatory Innovation As Unfolding Processes Of Relating

PDF

Wafa Said Mosleh and Henry Larsen

376-385

Results Produced By Interactive Research: Examples And Discussion

PDF

Glenn Johansson and Kristina Säfsten

386-393

Interactive Research In Production Start-Up

PDF

Martina Berglund, Ulrika Harlin, and Kristina Säfsten

394-401

Sustainable Working Life Development Through Interactive Research

PDF

Mattias Elg, Martina Berglund, Per-Erik Ellström, Henrik Kock,

Malin Tillmar, and Andreas Wallo

 

 

402-406

Participatory Entrepreneurship Education

PDF

Robin Van Oorschot and Frido Smulders

407-410

Par Experience From Production Innovation In Mälardalen

PDF

Martin Kurdve, Anna Bird, and Svante Sundquist

411-415

Copyright 2018 / PIN-C / PARTICIPATORY INNOVATION CONFERENCE

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