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Published byVivian McKinney Modified over 9 years ago
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Usability and taste Taste is subjective but not necessarily trivial Taste is subject to fashion Changes over time Influenced by other people What people are accustomed to or expect at any given time What people think reflects competence, skill at any given time
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Usability assessment is like editing Someone who looks at design (text) through the eyes of the user (reader) Helping the design (text) do (say) what it is trying to do (say) Encouraging the designer (author) to let go of favorite ideas that don’t help Streamlining, tightening, clarifying for the sake of usability (comprehensibility)
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Usability inspection Different methods have different goals They vary as to have judgment is derived and the criteria Defining characteristic: reliance on judgment (rather than more elaborate testing)
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Inspection methods Heuristic evaluation Guidelines review Consistency inspections Standards inspections Features inspection Cognitive walk-throughs Pluralistic walk-throughs
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Components of a walk- thru One or more task scenarios Explicit assumptions about the user population and contexts of use Sequence of actions a user is likely to perform to complete the task Prototype of some sort
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Cognitive Walkthrough Taking a systematic look at any product with an eye on ease of learning by inspection. Using prototypes, task flows, and scenarios: Walk in your users' shoes through your Web site Try out parts of the design, following a task flow or scenario Look for problems
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Pluralistic walk-through Involves several different groups, typically: Users Product developers Usability experts They walk through a scenario using a prototype
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Benefits and limits Short and fairly simple Allows developers to hear the concerns of users with the system directly, early enough to do some good Questions of validity given the constrained setting and tasks Scenarios don’t readily reflect the full gamut of possible uses and users
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Competitive usability study Purpose: gather insights from related sites Look for both problems and good ideas Understand the context within which users will be working Other choices What they are used to What is salient for users: whatever was sacrificed often becomes important in the next round Caution: easy to focus on trivia
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How to do competitor study Usability inspection by developers or usability specialists Usability testing by users With directed tasks With their own tasks
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Selecting sites for competitive usability study Sites that have good reputations Sites that have interesting features or designs The market leaders Sites your users may be familiar with Sites that have bad reputations, for mistakes to avoid Sites that are considered cutting-edge Ask users!
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What to look for Targeted users The user goals, tasks this site supports Content, functionality, navigation, design Things a site does well Why and how? Things it does poorly Why and how? Ideas to adopt Things to avoid
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IBM’s guidelines for rating competitors’ sites Is the purpose of the site clear? Does the site clearly address a particular audience? Is the site useful and relevant to its audience? Is the site interesting and engaging? Does the site enable users to accomplish all the tasks they need or want to accomplish? Can these tasks be accomplished easily? Is info organized in a way users will expect and understand? Is the most important information easiest to find? Is textual info clear, grammatically correct, and easy to read? Do you have a clear idea of what the site contains? Do you always know where you are, how to get where you want to go? Is the presentation attractive? Do pages load quickly enough?
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Competitive Evaluation: Information Schools Sites http://www.si.umich.edu/ http://www.si.umich.edu/ http://www.ischool.washington.edu/ http://www.ischool.washington.edu/ To whom are these sites addressed? What is your first impression of the school? As a prospective student, what is your reaction? Masters? PhD? As an employer? As an alumni? Walk thru the process of (1) investigating to see if you want to apply, and (2) applying
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Conclusions Content and functionality are paramount; other factors of usability are secondary. Different users have different needs; for whom is this site optimized? For new users in particular, the combination of content, functionality, design, and navigation create an overall impression of the organization and the site. The initial impression may determine whether users are willing to go further when they have a choice. In an inspection, it’s hard to get past initial, surface impressions. With further user testing or use, other kinds of usability issues and criteria become important. Guidelines and heuristics can help us to understand how and why a site does or does not work, but they are means to an end.
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