TY - GEN
T1 - Toward Feminist Ways of Sensing the Menstruating Body
AU - Woytuk, Nadia Campo
AU - Tuli, Anupriya
AU - Park, Joo Young
AU - Vidal, Laia Turmo
AU - Tobin, Deirdre
AU - Reddy, Anuradha
AU - Vincenzi, Beatrice
AU - Maslik, Jan
AU - Felice, Marianela Ciolfi
AU - Balaam, Madeline
PY - 2025/4/26
Y1 - 2025/4/26
N2 - Bodily fluids associated with the menstruating body are often disregarded in the design of menstrual-tracking technologies despite their potential to provide valuable knowledge about the menstrual cycle. We prototyped a finger-worn sensor that measures vaginal fluid conductivity, which fluctuates throughout the cycle, and brought it into conversation with people through two speculative workshops (18 people), four fabrication workshops (17 people), and a deployment study where participants brought the sensor into their daily lives (7 people). We unpack that taking a material and sensory approach to intimate tracking nurtures a feminist way of sensing while creating tensions around how we want to know our bodies—tensions around how, where, and when to touch the body, hygiene, data storage, interpretation practices, and labor. With epistemological commitments to feminist materialist and posthuman theory, we invite designers to embrace these tensions.
AB - Bodily fluids associated with the menstruating body are often disregarded in the design of menstrual-tracking technologies despite their potential to provide valuable knowledge about the menstrual cycle. We prototyped a finger-worn sensor that measures vaginal fluid conductivity, which fluctuates throughout the cycle, and brought it into conversation with people through two speculative workshops (18 people), four fabrication workshops (17 people), and a deployment study where participants brought the sensor into their daily lives (7 people). We unpack that taking a material and sensory approach to intimate tracking nurtures a feminist way of sensing while creating tensions around how we want to know our bodies—tensions around how, where, and when to touch the body, hygiene, data storage, interpretation practices, and labor. With epistemological commitments to feminist materialist and posthuman theory, we invite designers to embrace these tensions.
UR - https://www.open-access.bcu.ac.uk/16633/
U2 - 10.1145/3706598.3713466
DO - 10.1145/3706598.3713466
M3 - Conference contribution
BT - CHI '25: Proceedings of the 2025 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
ER -