Theorizing Affordances: From Request to Refuse

As a concept, affordance is integral to scholarly analysis across multiple fields—including media studies, science and technology studies, communication studies, ecological psychology, and design studies among others. Critics, however, rightly point to the following shortcomings: definitional confusion, a false binary in which artifacts either afford or do not, and failure to account for diverse subject-artifact relations. Addressing these critiques, this article demarcates the mechanisms of affordance—as artifacts request, demand, allow, encourage, discourage, and refuse—which take shape through interrelated conditions: perception, dexterity, and cultural and institutional legitimacy. Together, the mechanisms and conditions constitute a dynamic and structurally situated model that addresses how artifacts afford, for whom and under what circumstances.

[1]  Jessica Vitak,et al.  Explicating Affordances: A Conceptual Framework for Understanding Affordances in Communication Research , 2017, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[2]  J. Cooper,et al.  The digital divide: the special case of gender , 2006, J. Comput. Assist. Learn..

[3]  I. Hutchby Technologies, Texts and Affordances , 2001 .

[4]  Marshall Brown,et al.  Encountering the world , 2011 .

[5]  B. Latour On Technical Mediation , 1994 .

[6]  L. Winner DO ARTIFACTS HAVE (cid:1) POLITICS? , 2022 .

[7]  Eszter Hargittai,et al.  New Strategies for Employment? Internet Skills and Online Privacy Practices during People's Job Search , 2013, IEEE Security & Privacy.

[8]  Paul Abberley The Politics of Disablement , 1992 .

[9]  S. Greenberg,et al.  The Psychology of Everyday Things , 2012 .

[10]  B. Wansink,et al.  Ice cream illusions bowls, spoons, and self-served portion sizes. , 2006, American journal of preventive medicine.

[11]  J. Gibson The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception , 1979 .

[12]  Gina Neff,et al.  Imagined Affordance: Reconstructing a Keyword for Communication Theory , 2015 .

[13]  P. Leonardi,et al.  Social Media Use in Organizations: Exploring the Affordances of Visibility, Editability, Persistence, and Association , 2013 .

[14]  Martin Oliver,et al.  The Problem with Affordance , 2005 .

[15]  Steven Wright,et al.  Technologies for learning? An actor-network theory critique of ‘affordances’ in research on mobile learning , 2011 .

[16]  M. Turvey Affordances and Prospective Control: An Outline of the Ontology , 1992 .

[17]  Jen Schradie,et al.  THE TREND OF CLASS, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN SOCIAL MEDIA INEQUALITY , 2012 .

[18]  Andrea Scarantino,et al.  Affordances Explained , 2003, Philosophy of Science.

[19]  T. Stoffregen Affordances as Properties of the Animal-Environment System , 2003, How Shall Affordances be Refined? Four Perspectives.

[20]  M. Oliver The Politics of Disablement: A Sociological Approach , 1990 .

[21]  W H Warren,et al.  Perceiving affordances: visual guidance of stair climbing. , 1984, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[22]  Joshua McVeigh-Schultz,et al.  Affordances, Technical Agency, and the Politics of Technologies of Cultural Production , 2012 .

[23]  Gale Parchoma,et al.  The contested ontology of affordances: Implications for researching technological affordances for collaborative knowledge production , 2014, Comput. Hum. Behav..

[24]  Donald A. Norman,et al.  Affordance, conventions, and design , 1999, INTR.

[25]  Richard A. Meisler,et al.  Technologies for Learning. , 1970 .

[26]  Richard C. Schmidt,et al.  Scaffolds for Social Meaning , 2007 .

[27]  Joanna McGrenere,et al.  Affordances: Clarifying and Evolving a Concep , 2000, Graphics Interface.

[28]  Gustavo S. Mesch,et al.  Digital inequalities and why they matter , 2015 .

[29]  S. Faraj,et al.  The Materiality of Technology: An Affordance Perspective , 2013 .

[30]  Gerard Torenvliet We can't afford it!: the devaluation of a usability term , 2003, INTR.

[31]  Lea Fleischer,et al.  The Senses Considered As Perceptual Systems , 2016 .

[32]  A. Chemero An Outline of a Theory of Affordances , 2003, How Shall Affordances be Refined? Four Perspectives.