Nino Bohn
Email: nino.bohn(at)uni-siegen.de
Room: US-D 106 (Ludwig-Wittgenstein-Haus, Campus Unteres Schloss)
Phone: –
Office Hours: By appointment
Vita
Nino Bohn studied B.A. Social Sciences and Media Studies at the University of Siegen. In his thesis, situated in Political Data Science, he collaborated with Christian Busch on a computer-assisted media content analysis titled “A Media Content Analysis of the Campaign Behavior of German Politicians on Facebook with Special Consideration of Negative Campaigning”, illustrating how German politicians use negative campaigning in social media and its effects on social interactions and reach. For this, he received the Tim-Spier-Study Award in Social Sciences 2017 for the best bachelor’s thesis.
During his master’s in Media & Society with a focus on Socioinformatics and Social Sciences at the University of Siegen, he worked as a research assistant in the Creactive Citizen project. His master’s thesis, written within this project, was titled “Civic Participation in Urban Planning through Virtual Visualization of Urban Spaces and (Architectural) Design Concepts”. This work exploratively researched various interactive visualization concepts of construction projects. Subsequently, a functional prototype was developed and evaluated based on stakeholder interviews.
After completing his master’s degree, Nino Bohn continued to work at the University of Siegen in the Creactive Citizen project as a research associate. There, he continued to engage with digital civic participation tools and their potential applications in urban development.
His research interests lie in the area of qualitative and quantitative methods of empirical social research. From a socio-informatics perspective, he is interested in the use of digital tools in public contexts, with a particular focus on cyber-physical systems.
Publications
2023
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Krings, K., Bohn, N. S., Hille, N. A. L. & Ludwig, T. (2023)“What if everyone is able to program?” – Exploring the Role of Software Development in Science Fiction
Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Hamburg Germany, Publisher: ACM, Pages: 1–13 doi:10.1145/3544548.3581436
[BibTeX] [Download PDF]@inproceedings{krings_what_2023, address = {Hamburg Germany}, title = {“{What} if everyone is able to program?” – {Exploring} the {Role} of {Software} {Development} in {Science} {Fiction}}, isbn = {978-1-4503-9421-5}, shorttitle = {“{What} if everyone is able to program?}, url = {https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3544548.3581436}, doi = {10.1145/3544548.3581436}, language = {en}, urldate = {2023-04-21}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2023 {CHI} {Conference} on {Human} {Factors} in {Computing} {Systems}}, publisher = {ACM}, author = {Krings, Kevin and Bohn, Nino S. and Hille, Nora Anna Luise and Ludwig, Thomas}, month = apr, year = {2023}, pages = {1--13}, }
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Taugerbeck, S., Ahmadi, M., Schorch, M., Bohn, N. & Wulf, V. (2023)Navigating the Challenges of Remote Research in Times of Crisis and Beyond
[BibTeX] [Abstract] [Download PDF]Crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic put heavy restrictions on researchers who mainly follow a qualitative, ethnographic stance that typically relies on immersion in the setting, bringing remote research into the spotlight. In this paper, we describe how we, as qualitative researchers, responded to the crisis by comparing our experiences in conducting remote interviews in two German contexts: 1) with employees from a video game company during the summer of 2020 and 2) with several political and non-political actors in a rural region during autumn 2020 to summer 2021. Drawing on these …
@inproceedings{taugerbeck_navigating_2023, title = {Navigating the {Challenges} of {Remote} {Research} in {Times} of {Crisis} and {Beyond}}, url = {https://dl.eusset.eu/handle/20.500.12015/5007}, abstract = {Crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic put heavy restrictions on researchers who mainly follow a qualitative, ethnographic stance that typically relies on immersion in the setting, bringing remote research into the spotlight. In this paper, we describe how we, as qualitative researchers, responded to the crisis by comparing our experiences in conducting remote interviews in two German contexts: 1) with employees from a video game company during the summer of 2020 and 2) with several political and non-political actors in a rural region during autumn 2020 to summer 2021. Drawing on these ...}, language = {en}, urldate = {2023-10-05}, author = {Taugerbeck, Sebastian and Ahmadi, Michael and Schorch, Marén and Bohn, Nino and Wulf, Volker}, year = {2023}, note = {Publisher: European Society for Socially Embedded Technologies (EUSSET)}, }
2021
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Saßmannshausen, S. M., Radtke, J., Bohn, N., Hussein, H., Randall, D. & Pipek, V. (2021)Citizen-Centered Design in Urban Planning: How Augmented Reality can be used in Citizen Participation Processes
Designing Interactive Systems Conference 2021. New York, NY, USA, Publisher: Association for Computing Machinery, Pages: 250–265 doi:10.1145/3461778.3462130
[BibTeX] [Abstract] [Download PDF]Most participation processes in urban planning offer poor incentives, especially for young citizens, hence important citizen’s needs are excluded. Our work aims at identifying the degree to which Augmented Reality (AR) might motivate young people. We developed an AR-app with Unity3D to create new interaction concepts for use cases in urban planning. Building projects and environment changes are visualized, so citizens can contribute design ideas to the process. Using a human-centered design approach, we invited different stakeholders to participate. We conducted 40 interviews and a survey, then interaction concepts were evolved by citizens in four participatory design workshops. Our findings show that AR can motivate increased participation in urban planning. We also demonstrate a new approach to engaging low-tech users in designing high-tech solutions such as AR systems by using haptic 3D-tools like Lego or clay. Furthermore, we propose ways in which AR could be used collaboratively and embedded in existing participation processes.
@inproceedings{sasmannshausen_citizen-centered_2021, address = {New York, NY, USA}, series = {{DIS} '21}, title = {Citizen-{Centered} {Design} in {Urban} {Planning}: {How} {Augmented} {Reality} can be used in {Citizen} {Participation} {Processes}}, isbn = {978-1-4503-8476-6}, shorttitle = {Citizen-{Centered} {Design} in {Urban} {Planning}}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3461778.3462130}, doi = {10.1145/3461778.3462130}, abstract = {Most participation processes in urban planning offer poor incentives, especially for young citizens, hence important citizen's needs are excluded. Our work aims at identifying the degree to which Augmented Reality (AR) might motivate young people. We developed an AR-app with Unity3D to create new interaction concepts for use cases in urban planning. Building projects and environment changes are visualized, so citizens can contribute design ideas to the process. Using a human-centered design approach, we invited different stakeholders to participate. We conducted 40 interviews and a survey, then interaction concepts were evolved by citizens in four participatory design workshops. Our findings show that AR can motivate increased participation in urban planning. We also demonstrate a new approach to engaging low-tech users in designing high-tech solutions such as AR systems by using haptic 3D-tools like Lego or clay. Furthermore, we propose ways in which AR could be used collaboratively and embedded in existing participation processes.}, urldate = {2021-07-05}, booktitle = {Designing {Interactive} {Systems} {Conference} 2021}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, author = {Saßmannshausen, Sheree May and Radtke, Jörg and Bohn, Nino and Hussein, Hassan and Randall, Dave and Pipek, Volkmar}, month = jun, year = {2021}, keywords = {creativecitizen, augmented reality, citizen participation, human-centered design, urban planning}, pages = {250--265}, }
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Radtke, J., Saßmannshausen, S. M. & Bohn, N. (2021)Windkraft in Nordrhein-Westfalen: Einstellungen zu Akzeptanz, Beteiligung und Konfliktlösung
doi:10.25819/ubsi/10009
[BibTeX] [Abstract] [Download PDF]In diesem Working Report werden Ergebnisse einer Umfrage in Nordrhein-Westfalen präsentiert, die Einstellungen der Bevölkerung zur Windenergie widerspiegeln. Die Abfragen zeigen, dass Klimaschutz-Maßnahmen, die Energiewende und der Ausbau der Windkraft große Zustimmung bei der Bevölkerung finden. Bei der Windenergie wird ein Nutzen für die lokale Gemeinschaft präferiert, bestenfalls durch direkten Bezug günstigen Stroms. Im Falle der Planung neuer Windparks werden detaillierte Informationen gewünscht, wobei wissenschaftlichen Informationsquellen am stärksten vertraut wird. Klassische Informationsveranstaltungen werden überwiegend bevorzugt, sehr viel weniger Online-Formate. Die Hälfte der Befragten würde eine Visualisierungs-App für das Smartphone benutzen. Finanzielle Beteiligung wird zwar stark von monetären Anreizen oder einem vergünstigen Stromtarif abhängig gemacht, wird aber auch durch Klimaschutz-Einstellungen beeinflusst. Planungskonflikte sollten durch Bürgerentscheide, Experten oder Bürgerversammlungen gelöst werden. Damit unterstreichen die Ergebnisse die Bedeutung von qualitätsvoller Informierung, Beteiligung und Neutralität für die Akzeptanz von Windenergie.
@article{radtke_windkraft_2021, title = {Windkraft in {Nordrhein}-{Westfalen}: {Einstellungen} zu {Akzeptanz}, {Beteiligung} und {Konfliktlösung}}, copyright = {Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International}, shorttitle = {Windkraft in {Nordrhein}-{Westfalen}}, url = {https://dspace.ub.uni-siegen.de/handle/ubsi/1997}, doi = {10.25819/ubsi/10009}, abstract = {In diesem Working Report werden Ergebnisse einer Umfrage in Nordrhein-Westfalen präsentiert, die Einstellungen der Bevölkerung zur Windenergie widerspiegeln. Die Abfragen zeigen, dass Klimaschutz-Maßnahmen, die Energiewende und der Ausbau der Windkraft große Zustimmung bei der Bevölkerung finden. Bei der Windenergie wird ein Nutzen für die lokale Gemeinschaft präferiert, bestenfalls durch direkten Bezug günstigen Stroms. Im Falle der Planung neuer Windparks werden detaillierte Informationen gewünscht, wobei wissenschaftlichen Informationsquellen am stärksten vertraut wird. Klassische Informationsveranstaltungen werden überwiegend bevorzugt, sehr viel weniger Online-Formate. Die Hälfte der Befragten würde eine Visualisierungs-App für das Smartphone benutzen. Finanzielle Beteiligung wird zwar stark von monetären Anreizen oder einem vergünstigen Stromtarif abhängig gemacht, wird aber auch durch Klimaschutz-Einstellungen beeinflusst. Planungskonflikte sollten durch Bürgerentscheide, Experten oder Bürgerversammlungen gelöst werden. Damit unterstreichen die Ergebnisse die Bedeutung von qualitätsvoller Informierung, Beteiligung und Neutralität für die Akzeptanz von Windenergie.}, language = {de}, urldate = {2021-12-16}, author = {Radtke, Jörg and Saßmannshausen, Sheree May and Bohn, Nino}, year = {2021}, keywords = {creativecitizen}, }