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Alan Woolrych

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MPhil on Assessment of Usability Inspection Methods ... A bit of Fun. Cannot delete tmp150_3.tmp: There is not enough free disk space. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Alan Woolrych


1
Alan Woolrych
  • Alan.woolrych_at_sunderland.ac.uk

2
My Background
  • Research Assistant to Professor Cockton
  • MPhil on Assessment of Usability Inspection
    Methods
  • co-author, International Handbook on HCI, UIM
    Chapter
  • publications in international conferences and
    journals
  • HEFCE capital project management
  • usability lab
  • Multimedia Lab
  • Forthcoming Digital media centre of Excellence

3
This Week
Evaluation Methods
My Research
Evaluation Exercise
4
A bit of Fun
  • Cannot delete tmp150_3.tmp There is not enough
    free disk space. Delete one or more files to free
    disk space, and then try again.
  • Error Keyboard not found. Press F1 to continue.
  • Error 0000 No errors found, restarting computer.
  • Windows has found an unknown device and is
    installing a driver for it.

5
Approaches to Evaluation
  • Analytical
  • deduction, inference, constructing arguments
    based on inspection of web-sites
  • Empirical
  • factual, evidence gathered from real usage by
    real people

6
Inspection Methods
  • Heuristic Evaluation
  • Cognitive Walkthrough
  • Novice users, learning the site for the first
    time
  • 4 questions

7
Cognitive Walkthrough
  • Will the user be trying to achieve the right
    effect?
  • Will the user notice that the correct action is
    available?
  • Will the user associate the correct action with
    the desired effect?
  • If the correct action is performed, will the user
    see that progress is being made?

8
Heuristic Evaluation 1
  • Visibility of system status (Nielsen)
  • The system should always keep users informed
  • about what is going on, through appropriate
  • feedback within reasonable time.

9
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10
Heuristic Evaluation 2
  • Match between system and the real world
  • The system should speak the users' language, with
  • words, phrases and concepts familiar to the user,
    rather
  • than system-oriented terms. Follow real-world
  • conventions, making information appear in a
    natural and
  • logical order.

11
Heuristic Evaluation 3
  • User control and freedom
  • Users often choose system functions by mistake
    and
  • need a clearly marked "emergency exit" to leave
  • unwanted states without having to go through an
  • extended dialogue. Support undo and redo.

12
Heuristic Evaluation 4
  • Consistency and standards
  • Users must not wonder whether different words,
  • situations, or actions mean the same thing.
    Follow
  • platform conventions.

13
Heuristic Evaluation 5
  • Error prevention
  • Even better than good error messages is a careful
  • design which prevents a problem from occurring in
    the
  • first place.

14
Heuristic Evaluation 6
  • Recognition rather than recall
  • Make objects, actions, and options visible.
  • The user should not have to remember information
    from
  • one part of the dialogue to another. Instructions
    for use
  • of the system should be visible or easily
    retrievable
  • whenever appropriate.

15
Heuristic Evaluation 7
  • Flexibility and efficiency of use
  • Accelerators - unseen by novices - may speed up
  • interaction for experts so that systems can cater
    to both
  • inexperienced and experienced users.
  • Let users tailor frequent actions.

16
Heuristic Evaluation 8
  • Aesthetic and minimalist design
  • Dialogues should not contain information that is
  • irrelevant or rarely needed. Every extra unit of
    information
  • in a dialogue competes with relevant units of
    information
  • and diminishes relative visibility.

17
Heuristic Evaluation 9
  • Help users recognise, diagnose, and recover
  • from errors
  • Express error messages in plain language (no
    codes),
  • precisely indicate the problem, and
    constructively suggest
  • a solution.

18
Heuristic Evaluation 10
  • Help and documentation
  • Even though systems are best used without
  • documentation, it may be necessary to provide
    help.
  • This should not be too large, be easy to search,
    focused on
  • user tasks, listing concrete steps to be carried
    out.

19
Empirical Testing
  • Paper prototype testing
  • Lab Testing
  • Field Testing
  • Remote observation and instrumentation
  • Site Feedback

20
Paper Prototyping
21
Paper Prototyping
22
  • Main content selections for this page
  • Page title
  • Person responsible for this page
  • Intranet-wide navigation (e.g., intranet home,
    search)
  • Last updated date
  • Intranet identifier/logo
  • Site navigation (e.g, major sections of this
    section of the intranet)
  • Confidentiality/security (e.g, Public,
    Confidential, etc.)
  • Site news items

23
Answers to 1
24
Answers to 3
25
Interesting Results?
-3 to 3
  • Correctly Identified Page Elements
    Subjective Appeal
  • Template 1 52 1.3
  • Template 3 67 0.9

26
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27
(No Transcript)
28
My Research
To Accurately Assess UIMs in particular Heuristi
c Evaluation
29
My Research
Heuristic Evaluations
Predicted Problems
Task Sets
User Testing
Actual Problems
Compare
Assess Quality
30
My Research
31
Your Work
  • To be usability experts
  • Inspect a web site
  • Produce a problem Report

32
Problem Reporting 1
  • Section 1 - Problem Description
  • Brief Description
  • Specific Likely/Actual Causes
  • Specific Context
  • Assumed Causes

33
Problem Reporting 2
  • Section 2 - Discovery Method
  • Individual/Group Testing
  • Problem Confirmation
  • Adopted Method
  • Scanning
  • Searching
  • Goal Playing
  • Method Following
  • Method Task Description

34
Problem Reporting 3
  • Section 3 - Heuristic Application
  • Heuristic Breached
  • Evidence of non-conformance

35
Problem Reporting 4
  • Section 4 - Exclusion Rationale
  • Elimination Discussion

36
URL for Exercise
http//www.tyneandwearmetro.co.uk/
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