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User Interface Evaluation

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Tone & Etiquette. Special Considerations such as standards, disabilities, etc. ... Evaluating Tone & Etiquette. Is the language offensive? Are the messages polite? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: User Interface Evaluation


1
User Interface Evaluation
  • Usability Inspection Methods
  • http//jthom.best.vwh.net/usability/
  • http//www.cs.umd.edu/zzj/UsabilityHome.html

2
Usability Inspection Methods
  • Usability experts inspect your interfaces
    during formative evaluation.
  • Widely used in practice.
  • Often abused by developers that consider
    themselves to be usability experts.

3
Usability Inspection Methods
  • Heuristic Evaluation
  • Cognitive Walkthroughs
  • Pluralistic Walkthroughs
  • Feature, Consistency Standards Inspection

4
Heuristic Evaluation
  • Applicable Stages
  • Design, Code, Test Deployment
  • Personnel
  • Usability Experts, approximately 4.
  • Developers, 0.
  • Users, 0.

5
Heuristic Evaluation
  • Usability Issues Covered
  • Effectiveness Yes
  • Efficiency Yes
  • Satisfaction No
  • Quantitative Data is not collected.
  • Can be conducted remotely.
  • Can be used on any system.

6
Heuristic Evaluation
  • What is it?
  • Several evaluators independently evaluate the
    interface come up with potential usability
    problems.
  • It is important that there be several of these
    evaluators and that the evaluations be done
    independently.
  • Nielsen's experience indicates that around 5
    evaluators usually results in about 75 of the
    overall usability problems being discovered.

7
Heuristic Evaluation
  • How can I do it?
  • Obtain the service of 4, 5 or 6 usability
    experts.
  • Each expert will perform an independent
    evaluation.
  • Give experts a heuristics inspection guide.
  • Collect the individual evaluations.
  • Bring the experts together and do a group
    heuristic evaluation. (Optional)
  • http//www.cs.umd.edu/zzj/Heuristi.htm

8
Cognitive Walkthroughs
  • Applicable Stages
  • Design, Code, Test Deployment
  • Personnel
  • Usability Experts, approximately 1 - 4.
  • Developers, 0 - 2.
  • Users, 0.

9
Cognitive Walkthroughs
  • Usability Issues Covered
  • Effectiveness Yes
  • Efficiency No
  • Satisfaction No
  • Quantitative Data is not collected.
  • Can NOT be conducted remotely.
  • Can be used on any system, but works best on
    systems that you can walk up and use systems that
    dont require explicit learning.

10
Cognitive Walkthroughs
  • What is it?
  • Cognitive walkthroughs involve one or a group of
    evaluators inspecting a user interface by going
    through a set of tasks and evaluate its
    understandability and ease of learning.
  • The input to the walkthrough also include the
    user profile, especially the users' knowledge of
    the task domain and of the interface, and the
    task cases.
  • Based upon exploratory learning methods.
  • Exploration of the user interface.

11
Cognitive Walkthroughs
  • What is it?
  • The evaluators may include
  • Human factors engineers
  • Software developers
  • People from marketing
  • Documentation, etc.
  • Best used in the design stage of development.

12
Cognitive Walkthroughs
  • How can I do it?
  • Select the participants, who will be involved?
  • Select the tasks, what task will be examined?
  • Select the interfaces, which interface(s) will be
    evaluated?

13
Cognitive Walkthroughs
  • How can I do it?
  • During the walkthrough
  • Illustrate the task and then ask a user to
    perform a task.
  • Accept input from all participants do not
    interrupt demo.
  • After the walkthrough
  • Make interface changes.
  • Plan the next evaluation.
  • http//www.cs.umd.edu/zzj/CognWalk.htm

14
Pluralistic Walkthroughs
  • Applicable Stages
  • Design
  • Personnel
  • Usability Experts, approximately 1.
  • Developers, 1.
  • Users, 2.

15
Pluralistic Walkthroughs
  • Usability Issues Covered
  • Effectiveness Yes
  • Efficiency No
  • Satisfaction Yes
  • Quantitative Data is not collected.
  • Can NOT be conducted remotely.
  • Can be used on any system, but works best on
    systems that you can walk up and use systems that
    dont require explicit learning.

16
Pluralistic Walkthroughs
  • What is it?
  • During the design stage, a group of people
  • Users
  • Developers
  • Usability Experts
  • Meet to perform a walkthrough.

17
Pluralistic Walkthroughs
  • How can I do it?
  • The group meets and 1 person acts as coordinator.
  • A task is presented to the group.
  • Paper prototypes, screen shots, etc. are
    presented.
  • Each participants write down comments on each
    interface.
  • After the demo, a discussion will follow.
  • http//www.cs.umd.edu/zzj/PlurWalk.htm

18
Feature, Consistency Standards Inspection
  • Applicable Stages
  • Code, Testing and Deployment
  • Personnel
  • Usability Experts, approximately 1.
  • Developers, 0.
  • Users, 0.

19
Feature, Consistency Standards Inspection
  • Usability Issues Covered
  • Effectiveness Yes
  • Efficiency No
  • Satisfaction No
  • Quantitative Data is not collected.
  • Can be conducted remotely.
  • Works best on in house systems that have
    standards.

20
Feature, Consistency Standards Inspection
  • What is it?
  • Feature, Consistency Standards are inspected by
    an expert.

21
Feature, Consistency Standards Inspection
  • How can I do it?
  • Feature Inspection
  • The expert is given use cases/scenarios and asked
    to inspect the system.
  • Consistency Inspection
  • The expert is asked to inspect consistency within
    your application.
  • Standards Inspection
  • The expert is asked to inspect standards.
  • Standards can be in house, government, etc.

22
Heuristic Evaluation
  • A Closer Look At How To
  • Evaluate Interfaces

23
A Closer Look At Heuristic Evaluation
  • Evaluation is easier than design.
  • The principles that drive design, drive
    evaluation as well.

24
5 Human Factors Principles
  • Language
  • Layout
  • Color
  • Tone Etiquette
  • Special Considerations such as standards,
    disabilities, etc.

25
Evaluating Language
  • What is the language?
  • English, Chinese, Hindi, etc.
  • Do the text messages convey a message?
  • If so, what is the message?
  • Is the text long, short, organized, etc.

26
Evaluating Layout
  • Symmetry
  • Is the interface symmetrical?
  • Left-Right, Top-Bottom, Center
  • Attention Focus
  • Where does your attention focus go?

27
Evaluating Color
  • Contrast
  • Are the color contrasts good?
  • What meanings do the colors convey?
  • Pink its a girl.
  • Blue its a boy.

28
Evaluating Tone Etiquette
  • Is the language offensive?
  • Are the messages polite?
  • Will the content offend anyone?

29
Evaluating Special Considerations
  • Features, Consistency Standards.
  • Does it work the way it is suppose to work?
  • Is it consistent?
  • Does it follow the standards?
  • Disabilities

30
Affordances, Mappings Constraints
  • Use Affordances, Mappings Constraints to
    evaluate interfaces and products.
  • Use Affordances, Mappings Constraints to design
    interfaces and products.

31
Affordances
  • Affordances refers to the perceived and actual
    properties of the thing that determine just how
    the thing could be used.
  • The appearance of the thing tells you how to
    use it.

32
Mapping
  • The relationship between two things, in most
    cases the mapping from digital world to real
    world.
  • Metaphors and analogies.

33
Constraints
  • Limitations on the product.
  • Physical Constraints
  • Those that limit our physical use of the product.
  • Semantic Constraints
  • Relies upon semantic meaning knowledge.
  • Example automobiles windshield faces forward,
    therefore, you drive the car facing the
    windshield.

34
Constraints
  • Logical Constraints
  • There are the obvious, yet logical constraints.
  • You cant see items outside of your screens view
    port.
  • Cultural Constraints
  • Things that are specific to the users culture.
  • Example Americans drive on the opposite side of
    the road versus Europeans and West Indians.

35
Evaluating Interfaces
  • Look for
  • Affordances, Mappings Constraints
  • Language
  • Layout
  • Color
  • Tone Etiquette
  • Special Considerations such as standards,
    disabilities, etc.

36
5 Human Factors Principles
  • Language
  • Layout
  • Color
  • Tone Etiquette
  • Special Considerations such as standards,
    disabilities, etc.
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