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Administrivia

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Tendency to become solutions-oriented. Synthesizing User Information ... Helps designers to. Understand the implications of design decisions in more human terms ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Administrivia


1
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2
Administrivia
  • Feedback on first Deliverable
  • Audience Management
  • Requirements
  • Description of the system (what it is, how it
    works)
  • Define user group
  • Context (environment)
  • Demonstrate CI (provide goal? direct or guide?)
  • User-centered analysis
  • Meaning from observations
  • Did you learn about users and context?
  • Observations factual data
  • Specific Solutions/Recommendations

3
Project Sharing
  • Team discussions
  • Share results of user and task analysis
  • Discuss results
  • Answer student question list
  • Class-level discussion
  • Each spokesperson share one challenge, one
    surprise, and one lesson learned
  • Review answers to Student Questions

4
Discussion of Readings
  • Facilitate class discussion of topics / ideas /
    themes garnered from the online discussion,
    related to assigned readings.
  • Discussion Leaders
  • 1. Randy Dowell 2. Nancy Samuels 3. Carleigh
    Romeis
  • Insights from supplemental readings.

5
Where are we in the UCD process?
6
Motivation
  • Users decide when and how to use things
  • People often have many options of tasks to choose
    from
  • Depends on
  • Time
  • Cost
  • Skills
  • Capabilities
  • Confidence
  • Ease of learning
  • Values
  • You learn about a users tolerance and
    self-imposed constraints by observing.
  • If you observe variations, try to understand how
    important that flexibility is to the users.

7
Analyzing Tasks
  • Goal of analyzing tasks
  • Develop an understanding of what people do
  • Understand how they do things
  • Learn about constraints
  • Example tying your shoe
  • Risk
  • A device-driven design rather than a
    user-centered design
  • Developing a product/system that will not be used
    because it is incompatible with the users work
  • Example Visio

8
Task Diagrams
  • Types of Diagrams
  • Decomposition
  • Hierarchical Task Analysis
  • Task List / Inventory
  • Checking HTA task diagram for validity and
    completeness
  • Why do I _______? (look to the box above)
  • How do I _______? (look to the box below)

9
Actions
  • Consider
  • Purpose (why does this action move the task
    toward its goal?)
  • Cues (what tells the user its time for the
    action?)
  • Objects (what does the action operate on?)
  • Method (what IS the action?)
  • Options
  • Errors
  • Projections
  • Recovery
  • What if the action is not done?

10
Synthesizing Task Information
  • Challenges
  • Figure out the best way to help people easily and
    quickly do their tasks (and meet their goals!)
  • Arbitrarily change task sequences without good
    reason.
  • Tendency to become solutions-oriented.

11
Synthesizing User Information
  • Turning data into information
  • User Lists
  • User Profiles
  • Personas
  • etc.
  • Helps designers to
  • Understand the implications of design decisions
    in more human terms
  • Engage empathy toward the human being that will
    use the design

12
User Lists
  • Attributes
  • Skills
  • Professions
  • Job types
  • Learning styles
  • Stages of use
  • Character Matrix

13
User Profiles
  • Descriptions of the users
  • Narrative
  • Visual description
  • List
  • Prime examples / Archetypes
  • Enhance with specifics from observations and
    interviews
  • Fill in with unique characteristics of other
    actual users in the user group

14
Personas
  • Descriptive model of the user based on behavioral
    data gathered from actual users
  • User attributes
  • Details
  • Environment
  • Typical workday
  • Current solutions and frustrations
  • Relevant relationships
  • What the user wants to accomplish
  • Why the user wants to accomplish the end goal
  • Look for patterns separated along ranges of
    behavior
  • Service-oriented lt- -gt Price-oriented
  • Necessity lt- -gt Novelty

15
Synthesizing User Information
  • Challenges
  • User each person left to his own conceptions
    of the user and what the user needs
  • Projecting your own goals, motivations,
    capabilities
  • Giving edge cases priority
  • Making assumptions about the user
  • Avoiding stereotyping

16
Analyzing Users - Comments
  • Techniques/Representations
  • Are tools
  • That have an audience
  • Should be complementary
  • Are varied

17
Context
  • Develop an awareness
  • Users influenced by context
  • Activity around them
  • Physical environment (workplace)
  • Example Clock radio
  • Equipment
  • Example Postal Kiosk
  • Relationships with others
  • Pressure on users
  • To go fast
  • To not make mistakes
  • Timed, tracked or evaluated on performance
  • Is there help to answer questions and solve
    problems?
  • Local computing focal
  • Help Desk/Help Center Coworker
  • System Administrators or Technicians
  • Social
  • Example Failure of the computer-based training
    for call center staff
  • Cultural

18
Project ExerciseSynthesized Summary User and
Task
  • Using the contextual inquiry data generated
    collectively by the team, generate a synthesis of
    what you know about the users and the tasks.
  • Description should also include information on
    the context/circumstances in which the tasks are
    completed.
  • Prepare a one-page description of these results
    and potential implications for redesign.
  • Bring copies of the exercise to class (one copy
    for each member of the team, one copy for the
    instructor) and also post it to your design
    portfolio.
  • Due next Thursday

19
Looking back / Looking ahead
  • Where weve been
  • Topics Readings and discussion
  • What is UCD?
  • What to know about users?
  • Doing contextual inquiry
  • Analysis of user, context and tasks
  • Project
  • Insights about users, tasks, and contextual
    issues
  • Actual data from observing real users
  • Sharing among team members
  • Resulting in user, task and context information
    to analyze and synthesize
  • Where were going
  • Project exercise
  • Synthesis of user and task information
  • Summaries One page
  • Discussion Leaders reminder
  • 1. Kelly Lillis 2. Angie Moulden 3. Mark
    Hoffman
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