THE SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL DESIGN  

GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY  

Under the provisions of the regulations for the degree  

 

MASTER OF INDUSTRIAL DESIGN  

on  

Friday, November 22, 2024   

9:30 a.m. – 10:30 p.m. EST  

West Architecture 155

 

                                                                  Online link

https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NmUzNzRlM2MtYTUwMi00YmI2LTgzNTItMWEwYzlhNjVhZGU4%40thread.v2/0?context={"Tid"%3a"482198bb-ae7b-4b25-8b7a-6d7f32faa083"%2c"Oid"%3a"5525e090-ec99-4e9c-bdee-b18557580c97”}

 

Zhifan Guo

will present a thesis defense entitled,  

"Eliciting Design Insights for Everyday Device Supporting Informal Mindfulness Practices"   

 

Advisor:  

Hyunjoo Oh, Georgia Tech School of Industrial Design  

 

Committee: 

Alexander T. Adams, Georgia Tech School of Interactive Computing

                                             Leila Aflatoony Georgia Tech School of Industrial Design

 

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As smart devices increasingly dominate our daily lives, our attention has become increasingly fragmented. While informal mindfulness practices offer a way to restore present-moment awareness naturally integrated into daily activities, most technological solutions, such as meditation apps, paradoxically contribute to smart device distractions. This creates a need to explore alternative approaches that support informal mindfulness practices without relying on screen-based interactions. In this thesis, I examined ways to harmonize technology with focused attention by reconsidering time's role in mindfulness through a series of participatory study sessions. I developed two initial prototypes aimed at supporting mindful moments embedded in everyday living contexts. To gain deeper insights from mindfulness practitioners' embodied experiences and explore specific design considerations, I conducted a participatory design study with ten experienced mindfulness practitioners, inviting them to reimagine their relationship with time and everyday objects beyond screen-based interactions. One selected concept was developed into a working prototype through close collaboration with its original creator. The findings reveal time as a crucial element in mindfulness object design, with participants favoring ambient timing mechanisms over disruptive alerts and suggesting unobtrusive operation based on the nature of informal mindfulness activities.