This paper reports on a co-design workshop, where five participants (recruited through convenience sampling, including two authors of the paper) were asked to write a story about their Cultural Heritage and later editorialize it, using Wikipedia to add additional information and media to the story. Afterward, participants presented the created artefacts and discussed the story and activity within the group.

This supplementary website presents the participants' created artefacts. Through diffractive analysis of these artefacts, the full paper indicates implications for design for tools with Assisted Storytelling, especially tools using crowd-sourced content from Wikipedia and Wikidata.

  P1  
  • P1 is a British citizen living in Genoa, Italy.
  • P1 is a researcher in Computer Vision, Machine Learning, Retrieval and Digital Humanities.
  • P1 is part of the research team that wrote the paper.
  P2
  • P2 is a local Portuguese PhD student (in Digital Media), living in Lisbon.
  • P2 has a background in Design and HCI.
  • P2 is not part of research team.
  P3  
  • P3 is a Visiting Dutch Masters student, living in Lisbon for a couple of months.
  • P3 has a background in Computer Science.
  • P3 is not part of research team.
  P4  
  • P4 is a Chinese PhD student (in Digital Media), living in Lisbon for less than a year.
  • P4 has a background in Design and HCI.
  • P4 is not part of research team.
  P5  
  • P5 is an Italian long-term resident in Portugal (for more than 13 years).
  • P5 has a background in Fine Arts, HCI and Digital Storytelling.
  • P5 is part of the research team that wrote the paper.