Tezin Türü: Doktora
Tezin Yürütüldüğü Kurum: University of Liverpool, School of Engineering, Civil Engineering and Industrial Design, Birleşik Krallık
Tezin Onay Tarihi: 2019
Tezin Dili: İngilizce
Öğrenci: Sevcan Yardım Sener
Asıl Danışman (Eş Danışmanlı Tezler İçin): Owain Francis Pedgley
Özet:
Luxury is predominantly discussed within marketing, economics and psychology literature,
with little research made into the practicalities of designing for luxury products and
experiences. This thesis addresses the lack of an evidence base from which to design and
virtually prototype luxury automotive HMI (human-machine interaction) systems. The work
involved five interconnected studies and two industrial partners: Bentley Motors –
manufacturers of luxury automobiles; and the VEC (Virtual Engineering Centre) – a
consultancy and R&D organization specialising in digital simulation.
In Study 1, a literature review was conducted to build a foundation for the research, providing
definitions of luxury and investigating attributes of luxury products, cars and experiences.
Four distinct luxury values were identified: financial, symbolic, functional and experiential.
Study 2 comprised a benchmarking field study using immersion methods. The HMI system
for four luxury cars was analysed to reveal state-of-the-art uses of interaction technologies
and control/interaction details. The study provided the researcher with luxury car
orientation, whilst uncovering notable tensions in the integration of luxurious design details
with advanced interaction and interface technologies.
Study 3 comprised the main field research, seeking to deeply probe drivers’ understanding
and expectations for HMI systems qualified as providing a luxury experience. Semi-structured
in-car interviews were conducted with Bentley Motors employees (n=28). Transcript and
video data were processed using grounded theory, verbatim coding and content analysis.
The verbatim codes led to a quantitative hierarchy of design criteria for luxury automotive
HMI systems. The content analysis provided an exhaustive collection of user constructs that
were qualitatively clustered into maps of luxury automotive HMI system and experience
dimensions. In combination, the hierarchical design criteria and construct maps provide a set
of guidance to assist designers when conceptualizing luxury HMI system interactions and
experiences.
Study 4 implemented the guidance from Study 3 through a project to ideate a set of 3 luxury
HMI system concepts, as inspirational materials for Bentley Motors. A review of new,
emerging and unusual (NEU) interaction technologies was made to assist the generation of
concepts satisfying the luxury principle of rarity. Finally, in Study 5 a workshop with VEC
experts established the plausibility of virtual and augmented reality systems to digitally
simulate HMI systems using NEU interactive technologies. Study 5 satisfied a need within
Bentley Motors for better understanding of how HMI system design and virtual prototyping
could align.
The thesis concludes that: (i) user experience goals for luxury automotive HMI systems can
be uncovered in a rigorous way through design research; (ii) the design of luxury automotive
HMI systems benefits from a new set of a guidance developed from research data without
reliance on corporate know-how; and (iii) careful selection of virtual and augmented reality
technologies can provide plausible virtual prototyping routes for HMI design concepts.