Probing More-Than-Human Representation in Crisis Resilience Planning: An HCI Researcher Perspective
Published in Extended Abstracts of the 2026 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2026
Crisis resilience planning raises urgent questions about how to include non-human species and ecological systems in participatory processes, which remain largely human-centred. This paper reports on a workshop with HCI researchers examining how more-than-human representation is approached in crisis contexts. The workshop combined scenario-based discussion with two design probes – a voice-based conversational agent and an immersive embodied prototype – to support sustained discussion of how emerging technologies shape engagement with non-human perspectives. Participants focused not on system usability, but on deliberating representational choices, such as voice, embodiment, and realism, and their potential role within participatory planning processes. The findings suggest that giving ‘voice’ to non-humans is not a neutral act of translation, but a design challenge that introduces tensions between legitimacy, authority, and authenticity. This paper provides empirical insight into how HCI researchers conceptualise more-than-human representation and positions crisis resilience planning as a critical site for examining AI- and immersion-mediated representation.
Recommended citation: Tram Thi Minh Tran, Adrian Wong, Callum Parker, Carlos Alfredo Tirado Cortes, Marius Hoggenmueller, Soojeong Yoo, Nate Zettna, Joel Fredericks. 2026. Probing More-Than-Human Representation in Crisis Resilience Planning: An HCI Researcher Perspective. In Proceedings of the Extended Abstracts of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI EA 26). Association for Computing Machinery, New York, NY, USA, https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.02514
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