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CS 3724: Introduction to Human Computer Interaction Chris North Jason Lee Szu-Chia Lu.

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Presentation on theme: "CS 3724: Introduction to Human Computer Interaction Chris North Jason Lee Szu-Chia Lu."— Presentation transcript:

1 CS 3724: Introduction to Human Computer Interaction Chris North Jason Lee Szu-Chia Lu

2 WELCOME TO THE NEXT LEVEL

3 “Toto, I don’t think we’re in 2604 anymore.” Class discussion, participation HWs/Projects: open-ended Group project Student presentations

4 Course Overview Lectures and activities Individual homework assignments Readings Tests Hall of Fame / Hall of Shame Design project

5 Textbook Mary Beth Rosson and John M. Carroll, Usability Engineering: Scenario-Based Development of HCI (required) Visual C#.NET, Step-by-Step by Sharp&Jagger or Core Ref by Williams (optional)

6 The Project Team-based Choose topic –Information vizualization Problem seeking / problem solving Find users & problem, prototype, interim review presentation, evaluate, revise, final presentation C# language?

7 Grading Breakdown Presentation (hall of fame/shame) 5% homework (4 x 5%) 20% Mid term 10% Design project50% Team formation 0% Requirements10% Formative analysis & design20% Interim presentation 5% Prototype implementation10% Summative Evaluation20% Final presentation 5% Final implementation30% Final15%

8 Policies  Homework due in class Thurs. Late = 0  No early exams, make up by advance arrangement  Signed request with rationale  Reminder of VT Honor Code  Specifically, tests and homeworks are individual  Students with special needs see me ASAP

9 Adminstrivia Force-adds and prerequisite forms –CRN is 91680 / 91681 –Prerequisite is CS 2604, REQUIRED –Everyone must complete the forms TODAY –Must attend today –Add decisions by next meeting Web page ( courses.cs.vt.edu/~cs3724 ) contains syllabus, lecture outlines, assignments, and related materials

10 HCI ??? 1.What is it? 2.Who cares? 3.Why is it hard? 4.How does it work? 5.What will I learn?

11 1. What is HCI?

12 Human-Computer Interaction

13 1. What is HCI? Human-Computer Interaction 1.Requirements analysis 2.Design 3.Development 4.Evaluation of user interfaces for computer systems

14 Huh? An example: HomeFinder

15 Apartments.com

16 Hit List

17 HomeFinder

18 The Goal of HCI Usability People are trying to accomplish their tasks in life. (system independent) Introduce a system, User Interface should maximize their ability. task system person

19 2. Who Cares? Everyone, because: 1.Everything is a User Interface

20 Doors

21 More Doors

22 Communication Channels System to human: Human to system: system, world

23 2. Who Cares? Everyone, because: 1.Everything is a User Interface 2.The User Interface is Everything

24 Florida Cares! Human error: Who’s fault is it?

25 3. Why is it so hard?

26 Usability is hard People (users) are all different People are unpredictable Design skill isn’t enough Evaluation with users is required Designer’s pride New ways to think, break out of the box

27 Usability is hard People (users) are all different People are unpredictable Design skill isn’t enough Evaluation with users is required Designer’s pride New ways to think, break out of the box Programmers stink at Usability

28 don’t think like ‘normal’ people know the software internals, technology first enjoy systems more than people arrogant (my software!) Usability is hard

29 4. How does it work? Reqs Analysis Evaluate Usability Engineering Design Develop

30 4. How does it work? Reqs Analysis Evaluate many iterations Usability Engineering Design Develop

31 5. What will I learn? Activity design Information design Interaction design GUI programming Widgets, graphics, animation C# Reqs Analysis Evaluate Design Develop Task analysis Ethnography Usability studies Controlled experiments

32 A Method: Scenario-Based Usability Engineering Stories of people and their activities Typical elements of the story are: –A setting –One or more actors or agents –An orienting or motivating goal or objective –Mental activity, plans or evaluation of behavior –A “storyline” sequenced by actions and events Emphasis on use, i.e., people’s needs, expectations, actions, and reactions

33 Problem scenarios summative evaluation Information scenarios claims about current practice analysis of stakeholders, field studies Usability specifications Activity scenarios Interaction scenarios iterative analysis of usability claims and re-design metaphors, information technology, HCI theory, guidelines formative evaluation DESIGN ANALYZE PROTOTYPE & EVALUATE Scenario-Based Design

34 Grander Goals? Get angry! Mental shift: From system-centered design to user-centered design Break out of the box

35 Goals of Course (official version)  Survey of human-computer interaction concepts, theory, and practice.  Interdisciplinary underpinnings.  Informed and critical evaluation of computer- based technology.  User-oriented perspective, rather than system- oriented, with two thrusts: human (cognitive, social) and technological (input/output, interactions styles, devices).  Design guidelines, evaluation methods, participatory design, communication between users and system developers.

36 Goals of Course (Alternate version)  Learn that HCI topic is both wide and deep.  HCI is essentially about design and design involves asking good questions  Convince some of you that HCI is phat / cool  Convince the rest of you that HCI expertise is needed in most computer projects  HCI is science and engineering

37 Before you Leave… Prerequisites form!


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