User and Task Analysis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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User and Task Analysis

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User and Task Analysis Determine the boundaries of the system/network Identify users Collect information from/about uses Interviews Interviewing methods – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: User and Task Analysis


1
User and Task Analysis
  • Determine the boundaries of the system/network
  • Identify users
  • Collect information from/about uses
  • Interviews
  • Interviewing methods
  • Observations
  • Environment
  • Work practices, tools
  • Document analysis
  • Generate a user-task matrix

2
Grade system
USERS USERS USERS
TASKS Faculty students staff
View student list x x
Enter grades x
View grades x Only own x
Generate summary reports x
3
Identifying users
  • What is the system (service, product, and so
    forth)?
  • Goals
  • Boundaries
  • How decided
  • mandated by organizational goals, client
  • In the course of interviews
  • In discussions with client, team

4
Social Construction of Technology (SCOT)
  • Identify describe relevant social groups
  • Sociologically deconstruct the artifact for what
    it means for each group
  • Develop requirements, design that meets various
    groups needs, preferences
  • The same artifact may solve different problems
    for different user groups
  • Any one problem/need has multiple solutions
  • Trying to find the overlap where one design will
    satisfy multiple groups with different needs

5
Sociotechnical networks
  • Amalgam of people, practices, standards, rules,
    understandings, tools.
  • Social and material

6
Types of Users
  • Decision makers (e.g., purchasers)
  • Market researchers tend to concentrate on the
    people who buy designers on the people who
    perform tasks.
  • Primary users (do the work)
  • Secondary users -- E.g., the customer of the
    travel agent
  • Surrogate users -- e.g., librarians, customer
    service reps
  • May not speak effectively for the products
    users.
  • (But may be efficient source of information )
  • Gatekeepers, early adopters

7
CourseWeb course web pages
8
Users characteristics
  • Job/task/domain-related
  • When relevant, technology-related
  • Personal
  • Physical, cultural, motivational
  • Other?

9
HR users based on stages of use (expertise)
  • Novices
  • May be new to subject, technology, product
  • Are goal and task-oriented
  • May not want to learn, but do
  • Advanced beginners
  • Use infrequently and incidentally
  • Are focused on getting job done as quickly and
    painlessly as possible
  • Have begun to form mental model or concept of how
    system works
  • Concentrate on a few needed tasks which can
    perform well

10
HR users based on stages of use (expertise) II
  • Competent performers
  • Have learned enough tasks that they have sound
    mental model of subject and product
  • Can recognize incorrect series of actions and
    correct them
  • Expert performers
  • Use frequently as integral part of activity
  • Have considerable subject matter knowledge
  • Are skilled at solving problems
  • Have comprehensive understanding of whole

11
Goals, Tasks, Activities
12
Goals
  • Defined in USERS terms (I.e., not YOURS)
  • Multiple
  • Sometimes conflicting
  • Between individual and organization
  • Between individuals, workgroups, etc.
  • Within individual
  • Can change over time
  • What do people do when problems, conflicts?

13
Tasks
  • What someone does to achieve a goal
  • Multi tasks, same goal
  • See how people choose tasks to achieve goals
  • Time, effort, what they already know, history,
    habit, social pressure/models
  • Differences across users
  • What people do when problems give up goal,
    change tasks
  • Changing tasks, goals
  • Improvisation

14
Activities
  • Specific actions
  • Intentional and otherwise
  • Importance of unintentional consequences of
    intentional action

15
Suchman on plans and situated action
  • Some see plans as either formal structures that
    control action or abstractions across instances.
  • Instead, argues plans are resources for situated
    action.
  • Inherently vague detail of intent and action
    contingent on circumstantial and interactional
    particulars of situation.
  • Foundation of action is not plans but local
    interactions with our environment more or less
    informed by abstract representations of
    situations and actions.
  • They position us to, thru local interactions,
    exploit some contingencies and avoid others.
  • Rafting as an example.

16
Types and levels of task analysis
  • Workflow analysis
  • Job analysis
  • Process analysis, task sequence
  • Task hierarchies
  • Procedure analysis
  • how they do it now. Technology-dependent.
  • Pay attention to exceptions

17
Doing task analysis possible foci
  • Job multi people this job
  • Person not just in the job
  • Task more than one person
  • Place
  • Flow of information, artifacts

18
Types of Interviews
  • Structured
  • Semi-structured
  • Informal, conversational
  • -------------
  • Group
  • Individual

19
Related
  • Mental models
  • Scenarios
  • Personas

20
Collecting data from users
  • Questionnaires
  • Interviews
  • Focus groups

21
Setting Up Field Studies
  • Write down issues and objectives
  • Identify participants to represent groups that
    you need to talk with
  • Plan 1-2 hour visits with time between users
  • Screen users with a questionnaire

22
Selecting participants
  • People who represent various activities, points
    of view, experience and skill levels
  • Look for people who are thoughtful and articulate
  • Ask around see who gets recommended
  • Beware of the person who wants to be your best
    friend
  • But key informants are invaluable people who
    know a lot and will share it with you

23
Preparing for Field Studies
  • Form team 1-2 observers for each user, include
    marketing and development
  • Train team to observe and interview and to avoid
    being experts or defensive
  • Demographic questionnaire, release forms
  • Audio taping equipment, camera
  • Notebook for taking notes, sketching environment

24
Preparing for interviews
  • Do it in their environment if you can but be
    aware of problems of noise, interruption,
    confidentiality
  • NOTICE things
  • Send them email ahead of time about purpose of
    study, who you are, why you are coming, what you
    will ask them about
  • Tell them how much time you expect to need, and
    dont run overtime without their agreement

25
The interview
  • Begin by establishing rapport
  • Who you are, purpose, confidentiality
  • Establish stop time and how firm
  • Tape if you can offer to turn the tape off at
    any time
  • Note-taking
  • Walking out the door comments often the most
    useful!

26
Observing in Field Studies
  • Take pictures, sketch the environment
  • Note everything the user does, what triggers it
  • Who does the user interact with
  • What paper or information is passed
  • Get copies of artifacts, preferably used
  • Where does task end, does the user know what
    happens next

27
Interviewing in Field Studies
  • Ask about goals, dont just focus on tasks,
    listen for goals for the benefit of others
  • Probe goals, tasks presented as goals
  • Neutral vs. leading or blaming questions
  • Dont be shy, ask for more information, provide
    active feedback that you are listening
  • Ask user if your interpretation is correct,
    listen for no in pauses, maybes

28
Gaining Trust
  • Explain clearly the purpose of study, why you
    want to talk to them
  • PROMISE CONFIDENTIALITY
  • Be honest
  • Be interested
  • Be sympathetic but not artificially so
  • LISTEN
  • How you talk about others is how they assume you
    will talk about them
  • Re sources of conflict

29
Contextual inquiry
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