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Evaluation Methods

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The Hawthorne effect. Observation can change behaviour. Western Electric at Hawthorne, Illinois (1939) Also. The record is always incomplete ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evaluation Methods


1
Evaluation Methods
  • Human-Computer Interaction
  • Jenny Preece et al.

2
The HCI design model
  •  HCI design should
  • be user-centred and involve users as much as
    possible
  • integrate knowledge and expertise from different
    disciplines
  • be highly iterative so that testing can be done
    to check that the design does indeed meet user
    requirements

3
The star life cycle (Hix Hartson)
4
The Hawthorne effect
  • Observation can change behaviour
  • Western Electric at Hawthorne, Illinois (1939)
  • Also
  • The record is always incomplete

5
Preeces classification of evaluation methods
  • Usage data
  • Experiments and benchmarking
  • Interpretive evaluation
  • Predictive evaluation

6
Usage data
  • Observing users
  • Direct and indirect observation
  • Verbal protocols
  • Thinking aloud method
  • Software logging
  • Time-stamped keypresses interaction logging
  • Interviews
  • Questionnaires

7
Questionnaire on User Interaction Satisfaction
(QUIS)
8
Experiments
  • Traditional experiments
  • Usability engineering

9
User-based evaluation process
10
Usability lab
11
Usability Engineering
  • The process of usability engineering
  • Defining usability goals through metrics
  • Setting planned levels of usability that need to
    be achieved.
  • Analysing the impact of possible design
    solutions.
  • Incorporating user-derived feedback in product
    design.
  • Iterating through the design-evaluate-design
    loop until planned levels are achieved.

12
Interpretive Evaluation
  • Contextual inquiry
  • Cooperative and participative evaluation
  • Ethnography

13
Contextual Inquiry
  • Users and researchers participate to identify and
    understand usability problems within the normal
    working environment of the user.
  •  Makes use of the contextual interview.
  •  Recommendations to evaluator
  • Get as close to work as possible
  • Uncover work practice hidden in words
  • Create interpretations with customers
  • Let customers expand the scope of the discussion

14
Ethnography
  • a holistic interpretation of a groups culture
  • Blomberg et al. (1993) highlight four main
    principles that guide much ethnographic work
  • Ethnography is grounded in fieldwork - people are
    studied in their natural settings.
  • To understand the influence of context on
    peoples activities one must take a holistic
    perspective.
  • Ethnographers build up a descriptive account of
    how people behave, not how they ought to behave.
  • Importance is given to understanding things from
    the point-of-view of those studied.

15
Predictive Evaluation
  • Inspection methods
  • Usage simulations
  • Structured expert reviewing
  • Modelling e.g. KLM
  • Do not directly involve users

16
Structured expert reviewing
  • Example Heuristic evaluation
  • Expert reviewers examine the system guided by a
    set of high-level heuristics.
  • A1 Match structure with user tasks.
  • Does the structure of the website enable the
    users to easily achieve their tasks?
  • 0 No problem 4 Usability catastrophe

17
Keystroke Level Model (KLM)
  • Keystrokes (K)
  • Pointing (P)
  • Homing (H)
  • Drawing (D)
  • Thinking (M)
  • Response (R)
  • Example Enter the command put from the keyboard
    and start its execution by striking the Enter
    key.
  • MKpKuKtKEnter, or in shorthand
    M4KputEnter

18
Differences between methods
  • Factors
  • Purpose of the evaluation
  • Stage of system development
  • Involvement of users
  • Type of data
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