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Draft:Story Sharing Cubes

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Story Sharing Cubes and written instructions for the participant.

The Story Sharing Cube (SSC) method is designed to advance qualitative, in-situ data collection methodologies within high-uncertainty and complex environments. Since 2019, the SSC devices have been tested and developed in week-long transformative festivals.[1], such as Burning Man in the US and biennial transformational festival BOOM in Portugal, where participants have reported profound, life-altering experiences in high uncertainty setting. Evidence of such transformative effects was documented in a 2022 study published in Nature Communications in 2022 [2].

Methodology

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The Story Sharing Cube is based on the philosophical premise that individuals often interpret and attribute meaning to their experiences through storytelling [3]. Methodologically, in situ narratives involve the collection of stories within the environment where they naturally unfold. This approach contrasts with thematic interview methodology, as the two differ in contextual authenticity [4]. In in situ methodology, data is passively gathered in real-time within a natural setting, capturing spontaneous expressions and interactions. This approach is argued to provide a less filtered, more contextualized view of the experiences, while interview-based data collection typically involves active questioning, which may introduce external influences and structure that affect the responses [5].

Story Sharing Cubes technology.

Scientific outputs on the method (2019-)

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  • Field research report on applying the method in festive setting was published in article Transformation Through Connection? Insights From a Pilot Study of Story Sharing Cubes [1].
  • Conference paper Exploring psychedelic experiences: Insights from narrative collections in transformational festivals [6]
  • Usability of Story Sharing Cubes has been studied in MA thesis research Co-designing the Story Sharing Cube: a novel experience-driven data collection method for exploring transformative experiences in participatory culture communities[7].
  • The methodology and its potential applications in artificial intelligence have been discussed in article From Myth to Cyberrealism? An Overview of the Joint Future of Artificial Intelligence and Art.[8]

References

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  1. ^ a b Toomistu, Terje; Heikkilä, Jukka-Pekka (2020-11-16). "Transformation Through Connection? Insights From a Pilot Study of Story Sharing Cubes at Burning Man Events". Dancecult. 12 (1). doi:10.12801/1947-5403.2020.12.01.07.
  2. ^ Yudkin, Daniel A.; Prosser, Annayah M. B.; Heller, S. Megan; McRae, Kateri; Chakroff, Aleksandr; Crockett, M. J. (2022-05-27). "Prosocial correlates of transformative experiences at secular multi-day mass gatherings". Nature Communications. 13 (1): 2600. Bibcode:2022NatCo..13.2600Y. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-29600-1. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 9142525. PMID 35624086.
  3. ^ Vaara, Eero; Sonenshein, Scott; Boje, David (January 2016). "Narratives as Sources of Stability and Change in Organizations: Approaches and Directions for Future Research". Academy of Management Annals. 10 (1): 495–560. doi:10.5465/19416520.2016.1120963. ISSN 1941-6520.
  4. ^ Van De Mieroop, Dorien; Clifton, Jonathan; Schnurr, Stephanie (2022-01-31). "Narratives as social practice in organisational contexts". Narrative Inquiry. 32 (1): 1–8. doi:10.1075/ni.21090.van. ISSN 1387-6740.
  5. ^ Celuch, Krzysztof; Neuhofer, Barbara (2024-01-29). "Transformative event experiences: a visual in-situ study of change". Current Issues in Tourism: 1–22. doi:10.1080/13683500.2024.2309147. ISSN 1368-3500. S2CID 267416174.
  6. ^ Heikkilä, J-P.; Toomistu, T. (2023). "Exploring psychedelic experiences: Insights from narrative collections in transformational festivals" (PDF). The 2nd Finnish Interdisciplinary Conference on Psychedelics 11/ 2023 Åbo Akademi, Turku, Finland.
  7. ^ Ruijs, Hilda (2021). "Co-designing the Story Sharing Cube a novel experience driven data collection method for exploring transformative experiences in participatory culture communities". Aalto University Press. Master thesis.
  8. ^ Heikkilä, Jukka-Pekka (2021). "From Myth to Cyberrealism? An Overview of the Joint Future of Artificial Intelligence and Art". Futura (in English abstract and article in Finnish). 21 (1). ISSN 0785-5494.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)