Call for Papers - UX in Libraries 2024
The 2024 UX in Libraries conference will take place at Anglia Ruskin University in
Cambridge (UK) from 11 to 13 June. Once again, we will be sharing user experience
techniques, initiatives and stories, hearing from experts from both inside and outside of
libraries, and engaging in interactive workshops and challenges.
As ever, a significant and popular element of the event will be the papers presented by
attendees. These papers are selected through a blind peer review process with the UX in
Libraries committee (this year: Andy Priestner, Bryony Ramsden, Andrew Alexander, Julie
Willems) reading, reviewing and scoring the papers in anonymised form.
This year we will chiefly be exploring user experience through the themes of curiosity and
empathy, with presentations that respond to questions such as the following:
* How might we engender more empathy for our users when conducting User Experience
Research & Design techniques?
* How might we become more curious about both our users, and the data we gather from
them, with a view to increased understanding of their needs and behaviours, now and in the
future?
* How might we have more self-empathy, protecting ourselves from the emotional labour
of researching and designing user experiences?
* How might we decide when our research curiosity is too curious? Where are the
ethical lines and boundaries?
* How might we show more empathy for staff and colleagues when we/they are conducting
UX work?
* How might we select and conduct more empathic and curious UX techniques?
Your presentation does not need to respond directly to the above questions, but should
ideally relate to the themes of empathy and curiosity in some way. However, we will also
consider papers that are not on theme.
The UX in Libraries definition of UX work embraces both physical and digital, in fact all
aspects of library services. We see UX as about engaging with users more deeply and
meaningfully than is possible through transactional surveys (i.e. questionnaires) or
simply by gathering statistical data. If your paper is only about these data collection
methods it is unlikely to get through. We also encourage that UX design (the prototyping
and iteration of new spaces and services with users) takes place as a result of UX
research, so papers which additionally demonstrate this process will also score more
highly.
Papers should be submitted by the deadline of 2 February 2024. For full details of the
paper submission process and the scoring criteria, please visit:
https://bit.ly/UXLibs-CallForPapers2024
Conference bookings will open in January 2024.
Andy
Andy Priestner
Chair, UX in Libraries