Hi, Angelina,

I did a lit review about interactivity a few years ago.  I suspect that there 
are so many facets to the concept of interactivity that it will be hard to 
develop a universal classification (if, by that, you mean a classification that 
meets everybody's needs).

Below are some classifications extracted from that review.  Each highlights a 
somewhat different aspect of interactivity.

Eric Gyllenhaal
Selinda Research Associates

---------

Steve Bitgood (1991) classified interactive exhibits by what he called “type 
of response engagement.”  His three categories were:

   * Simple hands-on.  Exhibit prompts the visitor to touch, climb, etc.

   * Participatory.   Exhibit prompts a response and the outcome is used to 
teach a point by comparing it with some other response or standard.  In 
participatory exhibits, visitors might be asked to compare their own jumping 
distances with those of other animals, feel and compare the characteristics of 
objects, and so forth.

   * Interactive.  Exhibit prompts a response that changes the state of the 
exhibit; the change is under the control of the visitor (Bitgood, 1991, p. 5).  


Adams et al. (2004) identified three categories of interactivity based on 
purpose and underlying assumptions.  Here are their categories (I think I 
reworked their descriptions, though, to meet the purposes of a particular project):

   * Interactive is the primary experience.  The primary focus is to allow 
visitors to physically experience and explore a phenomenon, or concept, such as 
lift or drag of an airplane wing.

   * Interactive scaffolds experience with objects.  The interactive helps 
visitors focus on and appreciate an individual object.

   * Interactive supplies information about objects.  The interactive 
provides supplemental information about a collection of objects, beyond what is 
included in the objects’ labels.

Stocklmayer & Gilbert (2002) point out that interactives in science museums 
can be classified into (a) interactives linked to a common theme or (b) 
stand-alone.  They also introduce a second classification that applies to science 
interactives, and may not apply to other subject areas:  "Every interactive 
exhibit is either an exemplar (an idealized example) of a real-world phenomenon or 
an analogical representation (a teaching model) of a consensus model (one 
approved by scientific society) of a phenomenon (p. 838)."  They provide further 
subdivisions within these two major types.

Witcomb (2003) describes her objections to the technological approach to 
interactivity seen in many science museums and increasingly in other sorts of 
museums.  Then she goes on to describe and give examples of two other types of 
interactivity that seem particularly appropriate for cultural and historical 
exhibitions:

   * Spatial interactivity.  Witcomb’s (2003) example of this type is the 
Australian National Maritime Museum, which has been criticized for failing to 
offer strong linear narratives and suggested routes through the exhibits.  
Witcomb says this museum actually has a non-traditional approach to narration that 
she calls “serialized narrative.”  In this approach, exhibits were organized 
into individual “vignettes,” each with its own, stand-alone theme or subtheme, 
which did not require viewing in any particular order.  As visitors chose 
their own routes between vignettes, Witcomb saw them engaging in a form of highly 
interactive “self-inscription.”  Witcomb states that, “The positive effect 
of self-inscription is that it allows for a pluralizing of narratives and 
therefore of perspectives and subjectivities” (p. 146).

   * Dialogic interactivity.  Witcomb’s (2003) example of this type is the 
Museum of Sidney, which she says adds the notion of dialogue to the discussion 
of interactivity.  Because the exhibition focuses on the first years of 
cross-cultural exchange as Sidney was settled by Europeans, the designers “set up a 
series of cross-cultural dialogues—between past and present, between indigenous 
and settler voices, between the museum and its visitors, between traditional 
historical knowledge and contemporary critiques of that knowledge” (p. 156).


References:

Adams, M., Luke, J., & Moussouri, T. (2004). Interactivity: Moving beyond 
terminology. Curator, 47(2), 155-170.

Bitgood, S. (1991). Suggested guidelines for designing interactive exhibits. 
Visitor Behavior, 6(4), 4-11.

Stocklmayer, S., & Gilbert, J. K. (2002). New experiences and old knowledge: 
Toward a model for the personal awareness of science and technology. 
International Journal of Science Education, 24(8), 835-858.

On 5/16/06, Angelina Tsitoura <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> Hello all,
> I am doing a research on possible use of Interactivity in museums. I have
> been trying to find a universal categorization of interactives but
> unfortunately with no luck. Apart from computer related or not, which are
> the most appropriate aspects to look for, in order to do such a
> categorization?
>
> Any suggestions or guidance would be very much appreciated.
> Thank you in advance.
>
>





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