1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9911057025903321

Autore

Ashikin Said Noor

Titolo

Cultural Translation in Technology Design : When Technology Travels / / by Noor Ashikin Said

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cham : , : Springer Nature Switzerland : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2026

ISBN

3-032-13751-9

Edizione

[1st ed. 2026.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (118 pages)

Collana

SpringerBriefs in Anthropology, , 2195-0814

Disciplina

303.483

Soggetti

Technology - Sociological aspects

Applied anthropology

Technical education

Aerospace engineering

Astronautics

Science, Technology and Society

Applied Anthropology

Engineering and Technology Education

Aerospace Technology and Astronautics

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Technology is Never Universal: Theoretical Foundations -- When Technology Travels: A Case in Translation -- Anthropotechnology: Reframing Technology Transfer as a HumanEncounter -- The VR Tool that Needed Translation -- Life on the Shop Floor -- Perspective Taking and Local Wisdom -- Collaboration in Translation: Negotiating Technology and Culture -- What Makes Technology Transfer Work (or Fail) -- Inventing the Anthropotechnological Islet -- Conclusion.

Sommario/riassunto

This book explores the challenges and opportunities that arise when high-tech innovation crosses cultural boundaries—and how it can be thoughtfully adapted before reaching the end user. Drawing on a real-world case of a European Virtual Reality (VR) training system prepared for deployment in Malaysia’s aerospace sector, this book investigates the cultural and cognitive translations necessary to ensure any design tool's success in a new context. Rather than documenting failure, it



offers a blueprint for preventing it—by listening, adapting, and designing with local realities in mind. Drawing from ethnographic research, interviews, and human-centered design principles, this book explores the concept of anthropotechnology, aligning technology with local learning habits, social dynamics, and cultural expectations. It introduces the concept of the Anthropotechnological Islet, a bridging structure that enables imported systems to fit meaningfully into different environments before they are operationalized. The Islet is not a compromise between systems but a generative space for innovation that fosters cross-cultural adaptation and learning. This book is both a research monograph and a design manifesto. It tells the story of how a VR tool was reshaped—not just through technical refinement, but through cultural insight, institutional collaboration, and cognitive empathy. It offers practical guidance for those working in training, design, and technology transfer, especially in transnational or cross-cultural settings. In an increasingly globalized world, this book invites readers to rethink how we design for difference—early, intentionally, and with respect for local ways of knowing and learning.