THE MANY FACETS OF EUDAIMONIA
BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN THEORY AND DESIGN PERSPECTIVES
One-day workshop @ NordiCHI 2026

image

MOTIVATION AND AIM


Eudaimonic well-being has been named a grand challenge in both Human-Computer Interaction and Human-AI Interaction. Eudaimonia describes a concept of long-term well-being, rooted in doing well, as opposed to the hedonic short-term focus on feeling well. With its long history and broad theoretical foundation, spreading from philosophy to psychological theories on the one hand, and the diversity of technologies, domains, and approaches in the field of HCI, on the other, staying firmly grounded in theory while designing and evaluating technology to further eudaimonia is complex.

This gap between theory and application is bridged by design and evaluation methodology, which cuts through technological silos. This workshop addresses the points of connection between foundation, application, and methodology. Together, we aim to identify gaps and opportunities by providing a platform to share ideas and viewpoints on all three areas. During the workshop, we will develop a shared model.

CONTRIBUTIONS


We invite all researchers with an interest in furthering eudaimonia in and through technology to partake in the workshop. We encourage interested researchers to submit a 2-4 page PDF in the ACM master template (single-column) via email. Contributions may address, synthesize, or offer positions or ideas on the theoretical foundations of eudaimonia, the design or evaluation of eudaimonic technology, or the conceptualization of eudaimonic HCI. All submissions can be made via e-mail to or . Submissions will undergo a light review process, focusing on fit to the workshop.

WORKSHOP GOALS


During the workshop, your contributions will serve as a basis for a joint model of the state and opportunities of eudaimonia in HCI. In structured discussions, we will then collaboratively identify common ground and possible synergies, before discussing open challenges and next steps. Each of these discussions will contribute to a shared methodological model that can be the basis for a joint publication, while also serving as a guiding artefact for future research and design of eudaimonic systems alike.

Important Dates


SUBMISSION DEADLINE July 20
Notification August 10
Workshop October 3,
9.30am - 5.30 pm

Organizers

image
read more
Eileen Wemmer TH OWL UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES AND ARTS, GERMANY
image
read more
Hitesh Dhiman TH OWL UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES AND ARTS, GERMANY
image
read more
Yu Sun University of St. Gallen, Switzerland
image
read more
Nisha Devasia University of Washington, USA
image
read more
Aidan V. Campbell University of Toronto, Canada
image
read more
JAAKKO VÄKEVÄ Aalto University, Finland
image
read more
Erik Endlicher University of Rostock, Germany
image
read more
Michael Fellmann University of Rostock, Germany
image
read more
Carsten Röcker TH OWL UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES AND ARTS, GERMANY
image
read more
Jasmin Niess University of Oslo, Norway
image
read more
PAWEŁ W. WOŹNIAK TU Wien, Austria
image
read more
SARAH DIEFENBACH LMU Munich, Germany
supported by
image image image
image image image
image image image