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Wallis Motta

Researcher at London School of Economics and Political Science

Publications -  14
Citations -  139

Wallis Motta is an academic researcher from London School of Economics and Political Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sense of place & Context (language use). The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 14 publications receiving 134 citations. Previous affiliations of Wallis Motta include University College London.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Exploring the effect of spatial layout on mediated urban interactions

TL;DR: It is suggested that the properties of the spatial layout play a significant role and, to a certain extent, frame the type of interactions mediated through public displays, thus contributing to the understanding of mediated social interactions.
Book ChapterDOI

Tension Space Analysis: Exploring Community Requirements for Networked Urban Screens

TL;DR: This paper draws on the design process, implementation and early evaluation results of an urban screens network to highlight the tensions that emerge at the boundary between the technical and social aspects of design and broadens and extends existing work on Design Tensions.
Book ChapterDOI

Considering Communities, Diversity and the Production of Locality in the Design of Networked Urban Screens

TL;DR: This research suggests that urban screens will be framed (and eventually used) as part of this continuing process of social, spatial and cultural construction, and highlights the importance of enabling socially meaningful relations between the people mediated by these technologies.

Networked architectural interfaces: exploring the effect of spatial configuration on urban screen placement

TL;DR: The placement of an exemplar digitally connected urban screen, installed in the real world, is explored, suggesting that the properties of the spatial configuration may play an important role in influencing the nature of the interactions with the screens.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-Funded Social Impact Investment: An Interdisciplinary Analysis of the Sardex Mutual Credit System

TL;DR: Sardex as discussed by the authors is a B2B electronic complementary currency and mutual credit system, which allows private funding to be endogenously generated within a geographically limited socio-economic context, rather than injected from exogenous sources, leading to a greater level of positive social impact.