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personsentrisert

Personsentrisert is a neologism used to describe a stance, framework, or methodological approach that centers the person—individuals and their lived experiences—in decision-making across domains such as technology, design, policy, and care. It combines normative commitments to personhood with practical methods for incorporating individual preferences, autonomy, and narrative accounts into processes that are often data- or system-driven.

Origin and usage: The term appears in late 2010s discussions surrounding human-centered design and the ethics

Core concept: A personsentrisert prioritizes consent, transparency, and interpretability; it seeks to operationalize person-centered values through

Applications: It has been invoked in user experience design, healthcare delivery, AI governance, and public policy

Criticism: Critics argue that the term is diffuse and can obscure trade-offs involved in scaling personalized

See also: person-centered design; human-centered design; participatory design; value-sensitive design; user experience; privacy by design.

of
artificial
intelligence
and
governance.
It
is
not
widely
standardized
and
is
used
variably
to
refer
to
either
a
philosophy
or
a
set
of
practices
rather
than
a
single
theory.
In
some
uses
it
signals
a
critique
of
impersonal,
aggregate-centered
approaches
that
neglect
context
and
individuality.
methods
such
as
participatory
design,
narrative
inquiries,
and
consent
frameworks.
It
aims
to
reconcile
individual
agency
with
system
constraints,
emphasizing
accountability
and
ongoing
adjustment
as
contexts
change.
to
ensure
that
user
or
patient
voices
shape
decisions
and
that
services
align
with
personal
goals
and
values.
approaches.
Implementations
may
face
practical
limits
in
data
collection,
privacy,
and
resource
allocation,
and
the
concept
may
be
used
stylistically
without
concrete
methodologies.