description, general history

Establishing trust and truth

As a concept, presence does not only have philosophical, biological, psychological and technological dimensions. It also affects sociological structures. A considerable amount of research into the development of information and communication technology has focused on how to transmit and translate presence via technology. Over the last century technologies have been developed to mediate presence that have deeply influenced the way people organize their day-to-day lives. The popular acceptance of these technologies has created a new range of behaviour and patterns of social interaction. Furthermore, in the last few decades many public services and business structures have embedded ICT deeply into their systems.

Today, human beings are faced with multiple presences in multiple ICT systems when going about their daily lives. The way modern societies organize and negotiate trust and truth are based on the concepts and structures that were developed before these technologies were developed. For many centuries presence was understood to be a person's physical presence. Physical presence has been, and still is in large part, one of the organizing structures in our modern societies. In schools and at work presence is measured and has an effect on the evaluation of the performance of students and employees. In legal cases 'being present' is often required by law. Within the dynamics of the web of social relationships that any community is composed of, presence is connected to the way trust and truth are negotiated. To be present at a certain moment, in a certain place and to have one's actions witnessed by another person who is also present at the same moment in the same location is considered to be proof of one's presence there and then. Presence is actually one of the primary mechanisms that people use to establish trust and truth.

  • proposal, conclusion: 

    Design as Research

    Caroline Nevejan - One of the major findings of this study is the fact that the design of presence relates to the design of trust in social interaction. ...
  • methodology, stories: 

    Example 1: Voting

    Caroline Nevejan - In the Netherlands in 2006 during the national elections, all voters were supposed to cast their vote by computer. Hackers, among them ...
  • description, methodology, collective history: 

    Industrial and commercial research: to market new experiences

    Caroline Nevejan - In the media labs of large technological corporations around the world, and especially and foremost in the USA, the mediation of ...
  • description, concept, theory: 

    Media Schemata

    Caroline Nevejan - 'I could not go to sleep because the lady in the television set asked me to stay and watch a bit longer', said the aging mother of a ...
  • description, argument: 

    The social effect of databases

    Caroline Nevejan - Internet facilitates the storage and exchange of text, images, sound, music, film, radio and live broadcasts. With over one billion ...
  • description, conclusion: 

    Producing natural presence

    Caroline Nevejan - Natural presence has to be produced. Food, shelter, safety, education and social interaction are all necessary for survival and ...
  • description, argument, parresia: 

    Blurring between real and unreal

    Caroline Nevejan, Amalia - For survival, the blurring between real and unreal situations is problematic at first sight. When one needs to act for survival one has ...
  • proposal, argument: 

    Being alive

    Caroline Nevejan - People who have died can have all sorts of presences in the variety of cultures that the human race has produced. Pictures, statues and ...
  • concept, argument, conclusion, theory: 

    Presence qualifies trust

    Caroline Nevejan - Presence, I argue, is one of the major determinants in the negotiation of trust and truth. Because of the development of technology we ...
  • description, argument: 

    Causality

    Caroline Nevejan - Once the work has been done a confrontation follows regarding the costs of the work (personal and financial) and also the confrontation ...