Recently I visited a lot of venues over three days. At Westminster Abbey, Apsley House, HMS Belfast and the Churchill War Rooms we were given hand held audio guides which worked with varying degrees of success. We noticed that wherever they were being 'successfully' (extensively) used, they turned most visitors into zombies. My travelling companion made the observation in the cartoon above. I know that audio guides are a good way to control visitor flow and visit times, ensuring people get an overview while also pushing them through sites at a suitable speed. They can provide a reliable service not always possible unless you employ a large pool of highly trained staff, such as language options, BSL on video screens, child friendly tours. They can be a flexible tool, such as at Apsley House, offering visitors a choice of tours depending on their specific interests. They allow historical venues to be free from obtrusive signs. From the visitor's point of view, their experience can also be enhanced by a good audio guide, with music, interviews from behind the scenes staff, and video clips. However, using so many audio guides in a short time highlighted two - to me - unpleasant side effects. The first is how much people were attuned only to the audio guide, to the detriment of all else. The second was the isolation of the user. Most users at most venues were content to just move along the set route, pause at the set places, gaze at the described objects, move on when told to, and repeat until exit via the gift shop. There were many features evidently as old, as unusual, as noteworthy, as those featured on the guide, but the audio-zombies took time only over what was included in the audio guide, and sauntered past all else as if invisible. Even when it was suggested one take some time to look at an area, if there was no audio to accompany it... why look without any information to understand it?
For example: Westminster Abbey is full of fascinating insights into history, religious changes, societal commentary, fantastic sculpture... but woe betide anything not deemed worthy of the 20 or so stopping points. For most visitors, the audio guide was king, and nothing else worth looking at. If you did noticed the wonderfully and amusingly carved wooden seats, tough. The audio guide cares not, and there's no other information available unless you are willing to find, flag down and ask a human (lovely misericords by the by) Gradually you loose interest in anything not on the guide, as information isn't fed to you, and therefore, the thing to interest you may not be "important". It's worth saying that not all visitors became audio-zombies, as some people were content to ignore the audio guide wholly and just look around for themselves.Or they were engaging with their children, who weren't patient enough to use the audio guides. In two of the four venues I visited, the only source of readily available and detailed information was the audio guide though, so it's hard to say how their exploration was altered by the lack of context. They saw, and chose of their own accord what to look at, but how well did they understand and relate without any of the audio guide's overview? The second side effect of the audio guide was the isolation of users. Interacting with anyone else was clumsy, removing headphones, pausing a handset, you missed part of the tour, or lost your flow in it. Also your audio guide may be slightly ahead or behind of others you are exploring with, so you pause to mention something to them, and they don't get the reference as they haven't had the information yet. You wanted to talk to a companion, but they had just started listening to the extended information. Eventually people noticeably stopped interacting, beyond sometimes pointing at an object, or passing comment when the guide was paused between stopping points. You experience and engage alone, with rare moments when you briefly discover what other visitors are experiencing, or how they are engaging. So, the two elements I love about visiting historic venues are the exploration, and the interaction. For me though it feels as though audio guides provide too proscribed a way to engage, and do little to encourage independent exploration or appreciation. "I like that painting, but it's obviously not interesting as it's not in the audio guide, so I'll overlook it". And then being wrapped up in headphones, or holding something to your ear means missing out on personal interaction, the shared moments of enjoyment and observation that may alter your opinion or help you learn about your fellow travelers. Audio guides can be a fantastic tool, and I assume the tools I recently used are thought to be doing their well job by their venues. I highly commend what has been done with them at Apsley House and the Churchill War Rooms. Yet, I think were I ever to be involved in an audio guide project, I would ensure that the guide actively encourages independent exploration and personal interaction, and that there's easy access to further information beyond the voice in a box.
3 Comments
alison
25/4/2016 08:19:33 pm
maybe what is needed is an augmented reality app = point phone at 'interesting thing' phone knows where in exhibit you are (gps plus local tags), have many information bites, show only those the user asks for.
Reply
The Attendant
7/5/2016 08:49:47 am
I agree!
Reply
Lex-Kat
25/10/2017 10:27:58 pm
I've never used an audio guide. Not sure I'd enjoy it, as I like to look around a museum at my own pace. And thanks to 'Mysteries at the Museum', I now have a tendency to look for the stuff that may get overlooked by some.
Reply
Leave a Reply. |
Webcomic and occasional blog about the heritage sector. Follow The Attendant:Topics
All
AuthorAll text and images are produced by and copyright of the artist, holder of the domain name of attendantsview.com Archives
February 2023
|