Track 1
Track 1
Track 2
Track 2
Track 3
Track 3
Track 4
Track 4
Track 5
Track 5
Top
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
Jens Aldenlöv, Tina Karrbom Gustavsson, Bjarne Bergquist, Peter Stöderholm, and Per-Erik Eriksson
1-5
Christina Villefrance Møller
6-13
Anders Fundin
14-20
Johan Lilja, Camilla Abrahamsson, Klas Palm, and Christer Hedlund
21-28
Erik Rosell and Joacim Rosenlund
29-35
Matti Luhtala, Johanna Lappi-Ramula, Miika Lehtinen, Teemu Kataja, and Jonas Vos
36-43
Yuji Yamamoto
44-51
Klas Palm
52-60
Anders Wikström and Helena Jerregård
61-67
Erik Lindhult and Christer Nygren
68-77
Karina Solsø and Henry Larsen
78-86
Henry Larsen, Preben Friis, Elisabeth Assing Hvidt, Niels Christian Hvidt, Connie Timmermann, Lilli Sørensen, and Jette Ammentorp
87-94
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
Benedita Camacho, João António Mota, and João Rui Pita
95-102
103-110
Klas Palm, Ulrika Persson-Fischier, and Malin Tistad
Signe Louise Yndigegn and Marie Kirstejn Aakjær
111-119
Luca Simeone
120-123
Stella Boess
124-129
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
Kristen Snyder
130-136
Peter Österberg and Bengt Köping Olsson
137-142
Katarina Wetter-Edman and Lisa Malmberg
143-145
Bengt Köping Olsson and László Harmat
146-153
Tomas Backström
154-161
Eva Marichalar-Freixa
162-166
Bengt Köping Olsson and Anna-Lena Carlsson
167-176
Merja Salonen
177-182
Klas Nevrin
183-191
Laura Lucia Parolin and Carmen Pellegrinelli
192-200
Anne Pässilä, Allan Owens, Anu Laukkanen, Raquel Benmerqui, and Arja Lehto
201-207
Magnus Hoppe
208-218
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
Jane Webb
219-226
Stefan Holmlid
227-232
Bjarne Hindersson and Koteshwar Cirumalla
233-242
Martin J. Eppler and Sebastian Kernbach
243-250
Stina Wessman and Lizette Reitsma
251-259
Jennie Schaeffer, Mia Heikkilä, and Malin Lindberg
260-269
Lucia Crevani and Michela Cozza
270-279
Sara Said Mosleh
280-285
Merja Ryöppy, Sofus Bach Poulsen, Pavels Konstantinovs, and Salu Ylirisku
286-293
Jacob Buur, Kristian Mortensen, Christina Fyhn Nielsen, and Johannes Wagner
294-302
Laura Gottlieb
303-309
Peter Vistisen and Thessa Jensen
310-318
Thorbjörn Swenberg
319-323
Alexandra Mack, Wayne Pethrick, and Zhenan Hong
324-330
Yvonne Erikson
331-337
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
Joacim Rosenlund and Erik Rosell
338-344
Tim Overkamp and Stefan Holmlid
345-348
Stella Boess, Helena Keizer, and Sacha Silvester
349-354
Peter E. Johansson
355-359
Giulia Nardelli and Kasper Edwards
360-364
Erik Lindhult
365-375
Wafa Said Mosleh and Henry Larsen
376-385
Glenn Johansson and Kristina Säfsten
386-393
Martina Berglund, Ulrika Harlin, and Kristina Säfsten
394-401
Mattias Elg, Martina Berglund, Per-Erik Ellström, Henrik Kock,
Malin Tillmar, and Andreas Wallo
402-406
Robin Van Oorschot and Frido Smulders
407-410
Martin Kurdve, Anna Bird, and Svante Sundquist
411-415