„From smart speaker to smart home: The project investigates the domestication of data-intensive sensory media in interaction. It explores how 'intelligent' living environments digitally capture households in terms of language, motor skills and sensory perception.“
“Voice Assistants in Private Homes – Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse”
Stephan Habscheid (University of Siegen)/ Tim Hector (University of Siegen)/ Dagmar Hoffmann (University of Siegen)/ David Waldecker (TU Darmstadt) (Eds.)
Investigating the interplay of media, data, and language in domestic environments—now available as an open-access volume.
We are delighted to announce the publication of Voice Assistants in Private Homes: Media, Data, and Language in Interaction and Discourse, an interdisciplinary volume edited by Stephan Habscheid, Tim Hector, Dagmar Hoffmann, and David Waldecker from our CRC. This open-access book provides various contributions regarding voice assistant technologies and their integration into daily life.
The new volume examines voice assistants from different angles, including perspectives of linguistics, sociology, media studies, HCI-research and law, addressing issues such as media and data practices, surveillance, data capitalism, anthropomorphisation, privacy concerns, and the domestication of technology in households. The volume is freely available online through open-access publishing with transcript – you can download the ebook here.
Contributions include analyses of linguistic practices and conceptualisations, studies on capitalist practices and the negotiation of surveillance and privacy as well as reflections on the sociotechnical dynamics of voice assistants. The book also considers broader implications for data ethics and AI development with an outlook on the latest developments in the rise of Large Language Models. The compliation also includes an interview with Nikolai Horn, political advisor on ethical and legal aspects of the digital sphere, dealing with voice assistants and the GDPR.
This publication is essential reading for researchers dealing with human-machine-dialogs, platform technologies, issues of surveillance, privacy and data protection in linguistics, media studies, sociology, and related fields, in particular (but not limited to) those interested in the role of intelligent personal assistants.
The book is part of the Media in Action book series, edited by the Collaborative Research Centre 1187 “Media of Cooperation” at the University of Siegen.
About the researchers
Stephan Habscheid(Prof. Dr.) is a professor of German studies and applied linguistics at Universität Siegen. He is principal investigator of the interdisciplinary project B06 »Un/desired Observation in Interaction: Smart Environments, Language, Body and Senses in Private Homes« at the Collaborative Research Center 1187 »Media of Cooperation«, Universität Siegen (together with Dagmar Hoffmann). His research interests include media linguistics, linguistic praxeology, language in institutions and organizations as well as small talk and conversation.
Tim Hector(Dr. des.) works as a research assistant at the Collaborative Research Center 1187 »Media of Cooperation« in the project B06 »Un/desired Observation in Interaction: Smart Environments, Language, Body and Senses in Private Homes« at Universität Siegen. He did a PhD in applied linguistics on the linguistic domestication of voice assistants. His research interests include media and cultural linguistics, conversation analysis linguistic domestication of media technologies and spoken language in human-computer-interaction.
Dagmar Hoffmann(Prof. Dr.) is a professor of media sociology and gender media studies at Universität Siegen, Germany. She is principal investigator in the interdisciplinary project B06 »Un/desired Observation in Interaction: Smart Environments, Language, Body and Senses in Private Homes«« at the Collaborative Research Center 1187 »Media of Cooperation«, Universität Siegen (together with Stephan Habscheid). Her research is focused on media and cultural sociology, digital literacy, and political participation.
David Waldecker (Dr.) is a sociologist and an academic librarian in training at Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Darmstadt. He was a post-doc at the Collaborative Research Center 1187 »Media of Cooperation«, Universität Siegen, and published his dissertation on Adorno in the recording studio in 2022.
About the Media in Action Series
The open access series Media in Action, conceived by the DFG Collaborative Research Centre 1187 “Media of Cooperation”, examines the history and present of networked, data-intensive media and their social implications at the interdisciplinary interface of social and media sciences. In the tradition of science and technology studies and actor-network theory, the German and English-language monographs, anthologies and dissertations in the series focus on the practices, (co-)operations and procedures in the use, production and analysis of old and new media. A central challenge facing the series is the development of appropriate ethnographic, digital, sensor-based and design-oriented methods for a new conception of the description of distributed ‘agency’ between people, computers, bodies and environments.
The Media in Action Series is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) – project number 262513311 – CRC 1187.
The series is edited by Timo Kaerlein, Isabell Otto and Tristan Thielmann.
New issue of the research magazine future features the Collaborative Research Center “Media of Cooperation”
Under the title “Computer, how am I?”, the focus of the 6th issue of the research magazine future (in German and English) is on topics from the Collaborative Research Center (CRC).
The new issue focus on the question what humans do with media and media do with us. Since 2016, the Collaborative Research Center (CRC) Media of Cooperation at the University of Siegen has been examining phenomena in digital society. This area is developing at a rapid pace. The researchers are increasingly focusing on sensor media and AI. They have found that machine and human sensory abilities are becoming increasingly intertwined.
Topics covered include:
Of humans and media (p. 4)
An article about the new research focus on AI and sensor media at the CRC.
From observer to actor. Today, algorithms in computer programs are autonomously making decisions (p. 11)
The research magazines frequents once every year since 2019 with a number of copies 3,500. All topics are discussed or determined together with the Research and Young Scientific Academics Commission, the Research Funding Unit and Prof. Dr. Thomas Mannel, the Prorector for Research and Junior Scientists. The main requirement for the decision is that it is cutting-edge research that is future-oriented. All issues are open-accessed.
Would you like to receive one or more print copies, for yourself, for national or international partners? You can order print copies via future@presse.uni-siegen.de. We will gladly add you to our subscription distribution list, free of charge, of course.
“Machine–Body–Space: The Entanglement of Human and Non-Human Sensing”
Thursday, 07. November 2024 – Friday, 08. November 2024
This conference aims to investigate the complex co-constitution of human and machinic sensing, examining how sensing, sensoring, and sense-making are intertwined in sensory practices within everyday environments.
The conference is hosted by Lorenza Mondada, Clemens Eisenmann and Philippe Sormani from project P01 and Stephan Habscheid and Tim Hectorfrom project B06 in the Collaborative Research Center 1187 “Media of Cooperation”
Together with our guests, we aim to discuss the evolving relationship between human and machine-based sensing and the effects of this relationship on everyday life. With digital and networked technologies becoming an integral part of our routines, sensor technologies now play a key role in personal and domestic spaces, from health management and home automation to environmental control.
These “sensing machines”, e.g. advanced voice assistants that can capture visual and tactile signals demonstrate, incorporate sensors that detect a range of physical attributes such as brightness, motion, temperature, and humidity. This data enables machines to interact with their environments in sophisticated ways—observing human and animal movements, noting environmental changes, and assisting in daily activities. These tools can be empowering, especially in contexts of disability and assistance, but they also introduce new challenges related to privacy, equality, and the nature of human-machine interaction.
Contributions from empirical research will demonstrate for instance how users mobilize the human sensorium as well as old and new sensor technologies, thereby making their sensory experiences comprehensible for each other – from moment to moment, in their temporal sequence and in diverse contexts, including the enhancement of sustainability, convenience, assistance, entertainment or security.
In our discussions, we will tackle perception, embodiment, and interaction within shared spaces, emphasizing how both human and machine senses contribute to shared experiences. By focusing on sensory processes as practices, the event invites a rethinking of how we understand bodies, spaces, and machines as intertwined in new, hybrid modes of sensing and perceiving.
The event will thus foster a dialogue on how sensory technologies shape, challenge, and redefine our understanding of perception and sensing, both in practical settings and in theoretical contexts. We’re welcoming an international crowd of guests: Christopher Lloyd Salter (Zürich) and Bertolt Meyer (Chemnitz) as keynote speakers and roundtable inputs from Katharina Graf (Frankfurt), Wolfgang Kesselheim (Greifswald), Jakub Mlynář (HES-SO Valais-Wallis), Hannah Pelikan (Linköping), and others.
Venue
University of Siegen
Room AH-A-217/18 (2nd floor)
Herrengarten 3, D-57072 Siegen, Germany
About the project P01
The project P01 “Media of Praxeology I: Multisensory Mediality and Cooperative Practice” investigates the cooperative accomplishment, accountability, and socio-technical mediatization of multisensorial practices. It extends digital praxeology by showing in detail, how embodied and intercorporeal practices of cooperation are fundamental for the study of sensoriality and mediality. Lorenza Mondada is Professor of general and French Linguistics at the University of Basel and principal investigator of P01. Clemens Eisenmann and Philippe Sormani are postdoctoral researchers in P01
The CRC 1187 offered visitors of all ages exciting insights into the everyday world of digital media and the opportunity to reflect on their own digital everyday life with an interactive stand at the “Open University”, hosted by the University of Siegen on June 8.
On Saturday, June 8, 2024, the Schlossplatz of the Lower Castle in Siegen was transformed into a lively research laboratory. As part of the annual “Open University”, more than 50 stands and hands-on exhibits offered insights into various aspects of university life. The DFG Collaborative Research Center 1187 Media of Cooperation also presented a fascinating insight into our digital present. Visitors of all ages explored the CRC stand to share their own experiences with smart devices and learn more about the research investigating our digital and cooperative lives.
The centrepiece of the CRC stand was a 12m long tent wall, which was transformed into a colourful map of our digitalized world over the course of the day. Visitors used sticky notes to mark where and how they use smart devices in their everyday lives on an illustrated map of the city and their homes. From children talking about tablets in kindergarten, to students presenting their favorite apps, to pensioners sharing their experiences with digital assistance applications – the diversity of contributions reflected the ubiquity of digital technologies in our lives. CRC researchers used this opportunity to talk to visitors and gain new perspectives on their work.
The CRC 1187 stand was well received, highlighting the growing public interest in research into our digitalized society. The research centre has been studying digital, data-intensive media since 2016. The researchers are investigating how digital technologies shape our everyday lives and how people shape and use them together. The CRC’s work currently focuses on sensor technologies and artificial intelligence and the question of what influence these have on our daily lives and work. At events such as the “Open University”, the CRC aims to make its research relevant to everyday life in direct exchange with the public and at the same time raise awareness of the importance of digital media in our society.
Executive Summary
Saving energy, eating sustainable and healthy food, managing remote work and family reproduction, care and domestic work, concerns about non-transparency in data utilization and digital surveillance, about consumer and audience manipulation: Private households serve as key examples of the daily practice of meeting contemporary challenges. These are places, moreover, where digital media are perceived and negotiated both as adding to existing problems and as resources for overcoming them. The private household traditionally plays a central role in research on the domestication (Silverstone et al. 1992) of media.
Digital, networked media are increasingly finding their way into households. This represents a correspondingly increasing challenge to the domestication perspective. As already addressed in the second funding phase from a media linguistic and sociological perspective, this is exemplified by smart speakers and the highly selective utilization they typify: Although such media are also embedded in social interaction and everyday practice, those who wish to exploit the functional potential of voice-controlled assistance systems must also adapt to technologized dialog structures and platform logics; in the process, they are forced to divulge a lot of information about themselves – information that may take on new significance beyond the household in the form of data in exploitation contexts that are opaque to users and defy attempts to influence them.
Assistance systems potentially only come into their own as central interfaces to their fullest possible extent in smart home environments. At the same time, however, the household thereby opens itself up to the outside world far more than before: Whereas in the case of conventional smart speakers, our observation was limited to the perceptual dimension of hearing or listening, camera and monitor- and sensor-based systems and their networking with a variety of stationary and mobile devices and infrastructures result, in extreme cases, to a massive expansion of registrable data. Under certain circumstances, this trend is accompanied by a further attack on of the boundaries of the private sphere. This may be perceived as a violation on the one hand (e.g. in the case of surveillance technology being used to monitor members of a household), but may also be seen as desirable (e.g. from the perspective of security) on the other. An empirical question that remains is the extent to which households are open to such technologies and what consequences, if any, arise for them or can be exploited by them. It remains to be seen how the shift from potentially acoustic to a multimodal form of surveillance will be perceived, accounted for, and shaped by the users. Following on from technical-methodological innovations explored in the second phase, this phase will continue to investigate human-technology dialogs and their integration into social interaction. However, it will expand this area to include the reconstruction of sensory orientations and bodily practices (Mondada 2021) as well as the consideration of sensor-based mechanisms and their technical interfaces in smart homes.
It can be assumed that sensory environments not only change spatial arrangements and social coexistence on the communicative level, but that the entanglement of senses and technical sensoria also generates new modes of the co-articulation of data and practices (Marres 2015). Against this background, this study asks to what extent and how users (can) evaluate and take responsibility for their situated media and data practices with regard to the discursive imperatives referred to at the beginning.
On the one hand, we focus on the multimodal and perceptual dialog, including domestic environments, devices and infrastructures. On the other hand, we investigate the evaluation of digitalized household practices against the background of prevailing crisis discourses (e.g. energy saving). At the same time, we explore the (partially) opaque sensory processes of the socio-technical infrastructures - extended by camera, monitor and sensors. In this sense, the project examines both sides of the sensor and data-practical linking of households and platforms.
We visit the participants in our study over a longer period of time to make audiovisual recordings, photos and notes on various occasions. Media diaries support the recording of media practices in the household.
The analysis combines video interaction analysis with ethnographic procedures and digital methods. The videos are transcribed according to multimodal standards. We use digital methods to examine the software documentations and sensor interfaces of the smart home devices used in the households.
In the first half of 2024, we will set up the research design, establish field access and explore the platforms to be investigated. We will then carry out the extensive fieldwork using AV recordings and ethnography, including data collection for the platform analyses (2024–2026). The collected data will be continuously processed, analyzed in data sessions and the procedure will be compared and critically reflected upon in interdisciplinary methodology workshops. In addition to project reports and publications, participation in several public events and conferences is planned for the final year of the project (2027).
„Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse“
Voice Assistants such as Amazon's Alexa populate private homes as well as smartphones, TVs and cars. While suggesting easy living with smart devices, these assistants are criticized as the next step of corporate and state surveillance of the private home, or as harbingers of new and simplified linguistic practices. The contributors to this volume focus on the transformation and persistence of everyday linguistic, media and data practices under platformized conditions and new interfaces. This collection thus brings together perspectives from media sociology, media studies, media linguistics and domestication research.
Habscheid, Stephan, Tim Hector, Dagmar Hoffmann, and David Waldecker, eds. 2025. Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse. Bielefeld: transcript. ISBN: 978-3-8394-7200-2.
2025
Habscheid, Stephan, Tim Hector, Dagmar Hoffmann, and David Waldecker, eds. 2025. Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse. Bielefeld: transcript. ISBN: 9783839472002.
Habscheid, Stephan, Tim Hector, and Christine Hrncal. 2025. “Linguistic Practices as a Means of Domesticating Voice-Controlled Assistance Technologies”. In Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse, edited by Stephan Habscheid, Tim Hector, Dagmar Hoffmann, and David Waldecker, 207-39. Bielefeld: transcript. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783839472002-008.
Habscheid, Stephan, Dagmar Hoffmann, Tim Hector, and David Waldecker. 2025. “Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Introduction to the Volume”. In Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse, edited by Stephan Habscheid, Tim Hector, Dagmar Hoffmann, and David Waldecker, 9-29. Bielefeld: transcript. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783839472002-001.
Hector, Tim. 2025. “Sprachassistenzsysteme und ihre Interfaces. Eine medienlinguistische Analyse”. In Un/reale Interaktionsräume. Formen sozialer Ordnung im Spektrum medienspezifischer Interaktion, edited by Clara Kindler-Mathôt, Leblebici Didem, Giacomo Marinsalta, Till Rückwart, and Anna Zaglyadnova, 55-80. Bielefeld: transcript.
Strüver, Niklas. 2025. “Innovating Alexa amid the Rise of Large Language Models. Sociotechnical Transitions in Algorithmic Development Practices”. In Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse, edited by Stephan Habscheid, Tim Hector, Dagmar Hoffmann, and David Waldecker, 365-402. Bielefeld: transcript. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783839472002-014.
Waldecker, David, Alexander Martin, and Dagmar Hoffmann. 2025. “Mostly Harmless? Everyday Smart Speaker Use and Pragmatic Fatalism”. In Voice Assistants in Private Homes. Media, Data and Language in Interaction and Discourse, edited by Stephan Habscheid, Tim Hector, Dagmar Hoffmann, and David Waldecker, 291-317. Bielefeld: transcript. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783839472002-011.
2024
Hector, Tim Moritz, and Christine Hrncal. 2024. “Sprachassistenzsysteme in der Interaktion”. In Sprache und digitale Kommunikation, edited by Jannis Androutsopoulos and Friedemann Vogel, 309-28. Handbücher Sprachwissen 23. Berlin u.a.: de Gruyter. ISBN: 9783110744101 .
2023
Habscheid, Stephan, Tim Hector, and Christine Hrncal. 2023. “Human and non-human agency as practical accomplishment: Interactional occasions for ascription and withdrawal of (graduated) agency in the use of smart-speaker-technology”. Edited by Samira Ibnelkaïd and Iuliia Avgustis. Social Interaction. Video-Based Studies of Human Sociality. Special Issue: Situated agency in digitally artifacted social interactions 6 (1/2023). https://doi.org/10.7146/si.v6i1.137378.
Hector, Tim Moritz, David Waldecker, Niklas Strüver, and Tanja Aal, eds. 2023. Thematic issue: „Taming Digital Practices – On the Domestication of Data-Driven Technologies“. Digital Culture & Society 9 (1/2023). ISBN: 978-3-8376-6357-0.
Strüver, Niklas. 2023. “Wieso eigentlich Alexa? Konzeptualisierung eines Sprachassistenten als Infrastruktur und Plattform im soziotechnischen Ökosystem Amazons”. kommunikation@gesellschaft 24: 1-33. https://doi.org/10.15460/kommges.2023.24.1.1194 .
Strüver, Niklas. 2023. “Introduction: Forms of Context in Digital Technologies”. In The Routledge Handbook of Media and Technology Domestication, edited by Maren Hartmann, 329-30. London, New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
Waldecker, David, and Tim Moritz Hector. 2023. “Taming digital practices: A praxeological approach towards domestication of connected devices and services. Introduction to the thematic issue”. Digital Culture & Society 9 (1/2023). https://doi.org/10.14361/dcs-2023-0102.
Waldecker, David, Tim Moritz Hector, and Dagmar Hoffmann. 2023. “Intelligent Personal Assistants in practice. Situational agencies and the multiple forms of cooperation without consensus”. Edited by Stephan O. Görland, Cindy Roitsch, and Andreas Hepp. Convergence. Special Issue: Agency in a Datafied Society 30 (3): 975-91. https://doi.org/10.1177/13548565231189584.
Waldecker, David, and Dagmar Hoffmann. 2023. “Inszenierung von kritischen Kompetenzen in Nischenöffentlichkeiten: Bewertungen von Smart Speakern auf YouTube”. kommunikation@gesellschaft 23 (1): 1-28. https://doi.org/10.15460/kommges.2022.23.1.1000.
Habscheid, Stephan. 2022. “ Intelligent Personal Assistants (IPA) in the Private Home”. Sprache und Literatur 51 (2): 167-96. https://doi.org/10.30965/25890859-05002020.
Hector, Tim. 2022. “Smart Speaker in der Praxis: Methodologische Überlegungen zur medienlinguistischen Erforschung stationärer Sprachassistenzsysteme”. Sprache und Literatur 51 (2): 197-229. https://doi.org/10.30965/25890859-05002021.
Hector, Tim, Franziska Niersberger-Gueye, Franziska Petri, and Christine Hrncal. 2022. “The ‘Conditional Voice Recorder’: Data practices in the co-operative advancement and implementation of data-collection technology”. Working Paper Series Media of Cooperation 23: 1-15. http://dx.doi.org/10.25819/ubsi/10225 .
Waldecker, David. 2022. “Zur empirischen und theoretischen Kritik der Datensouveränität anhand der Smart-Speaker-Nutzung”. merzWissenschaft 66 (6): 147-57.
Waldecker, David, and Axel Volmar. 2022. “Die zweifache akustische Intelligenz virtueller Sprachassistenten zwischen verteilter Kooperation und Datafizierung”. In Acoustic Intellingence. Hören und Gehorchen, edited by Anna Schürmer, Maximilian Haberer, and Tomy Brautschek, 161-82. Düsseldorf: Düsseldorf University Press. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110730791-011.
2021
Habscheid, Stephan, Tim Hector, Christine Hrncal, and David Waldecker. 2021. “Intelligente Persönliche Assistenten (IPA) mit Voice User Interfaces (VUI) als ‚Beteiligte‘ in häuslicher Alltagsinteraktion. Welchen Aufschluss geben die Protokolldaten der Assistenzsysteme?”. Journal für Medienlinguistik 4: 16-53. https://doi.org/10.21248/jfml.2021.44.
Waldecker, David, Oliver Schmidtke, and Kathrin Englert. 2020. “Individuierung, Autonomie und Social Media. Überlegungen zum Strukturwandel von Öffentlichkeit und Privatheit”. Sprache und Literatur 49 (1): 171-99. https://doi.org/10.30965/25890859-04901007.
2019
Englert, Kathrin, David Waldecker, and Oliver Schmidtke. 2019. “Un/erbetene Beobachtung: Bewertung richtigen Medienhandelns in Zeiten seiner Hyper-Beobachtbarkeit”. In Digitale Bewertungspraktiken. Für eine Bewertungssoziologie des Digitalen, edited by Jonathan Kropf and Stephan Laser, 215-36. Wiesbaden: Springer VS. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-21165-3_9.
Schmidtke, Oliver, Kathrin Englert, and David Waldecker. 2019. “Vom alltäglichen Ziehen fließender Grenzen. Die Veröffentlichung von Intimität bei jugendlichen Social-Media-Nutzer/innen”. In Intimisierung des Öffentlichen. Zur multiplen Privatisierung des Öffentlichen in der digitalen Ära, edited by Patrik Ettinger, Mark Eisenegger, Marlis Prinzing, and Roger Blum, 211-26. Mediensymposium. Wiesbaden: Springer VS. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-24052-3_12.
Waldecker, David, Kathrin Englert, and Wolfgang Ludwig-Mayerhofer. 2019. “Media Ethnography and Participation in Online Practices”. Media in Action. Interdisciplinary Journal on Cooperative Media 3 (1): 9-22. https://www001.zimt.uni-siegen.de/ojs/index.php/mia/article/view/47.
2018
Kathrin, Englert, Lene Faust, Christian Heinrich-Franke, Claudia Müller, and Cornelius Schubert (Hrsg.). 2018. “Thematic Focus: Socioinformatics”. Media in Action. Interdisciplinary Journal on Cooperative Media, Sonderheft, 2 (1). https://www001.zimt.uni-siegen.de/ojs/index.php/mia/issue/view/9.
2017
Englert, Kathrin, Jacqueline Klesse, Wolfgang Ludwig-Mayerhofer, Oliver Schmidtke, and David Waldecker. 2017. “‚Das Digitale‘ und sein Modus Operandi. Bewertungen (un)erbetener Be(ob)achtung”. In Geschlossene Gesellschaften. Verhandlungen des 38. Kongresses der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Soziologie in Bamberg 2016, edited by Stephan Lessenich. Bamberg: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Soziologie. http://publikationen.soziologie.de/index.php/kongressband_2016/article/view/524.
Reißmann, Wolfgang, and Dagmar Hoffmann. 2017. “Mediatisierung und Mediensozialisation. Überlegungen zum Verhältnis zweier Forschungsfelder”. In Mediatisierung und Mediensozialisation. Prozesse – Räume – Praktiken, edited by Dagmar Hoffmann, Friedrich Krotz, and Wolfgang Reißmann, 59-78. Wiesbaden: Springer VS. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-14937-6_4.