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Contextual Inquiry

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Title: Contextual Inquiry Author: John Kelleher Last modified by: John Kelleher Created Date: 10/8/2003 10:53:30 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Contextual Inquiry


1
Contextual Inquiry
  • Material SourceProfessor John Landay, UCB

2
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3
User Study Methods the different fields they
come from
  • Social Psychology
  • Focus Groups
  • Business, marketing technique
  • Laboratory studies
  • Experimental Psychology
  • Think-aloud protocols
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Participant/observer ethnographic studies
  • Anthropology

4
Contextual Inquiry
  • Technique for examining and understanding users
    and their workplace, tasks, issues and
    preferences.
  • http//www.infodesign.com.au
  • Witness users performing tasks
  • Objective rather than subjective as with
    questionnaire
  • An evolving method
  • A kind of enthnographic or participatory
    design method
  • Combines aspects of other methods
  • Interviewing, think-aloud protocols,
    participant/observer in the context of the work
  • Part of Contextual Design
  • Read www.incent.com

5
HCI methods in the design process
Contextual Inquiry
Tasks
Think-Aloud Usability Studies
Heuristic Evaluation
Cognitive Walkthrough
GOMS
Empirical Methods
Analytic Methods
  • Contextual Inquiry is used in beginning of design
    process

6
Contextual Inquiry
  • Interpretive field research method
  • Depends on conversations with users in the
    context of their work
  • Recommends direct observation when possible
  • When not possible
  • cued recall of past experience, or
  • recreation of related experience
  • Used to define requirements, plans and designs.
  • Drives the creative process
  • In original design
  • In considering new features or functionality

7
Why Context?
  • Design complete work process
  • Fits into fabric of entire operations
  • Not just point solutions to specific problems
  • Integration! e.g. those who bought this also
  • Design from data (not instinct or guess)
  • Not just opinions, negotiation
  • Not just a list of features

8
Who conducts it?
  • Interviewers Cross-functional team
  • Designers
  • UI specialists
  • Product managers
  • Marketing
  • Technical people
  • Customers
  • Between 6 20
  • Representative of different roles

9
Key concepts in Contextual Inquiry
  • Context
  • Understand users' needs in their work or living
    environment
  • Partnership
  • Work with users as co-investigators
  • Interpretation
  • Assigning meaning to the observations
  • Focus
  • Listen and probe from a clearly defined set of
    concerns

10
Context
  • Definition
  • The interrelated conditions within which
    something occurs or exists
  • Understand work in its natural environment
  • Go to the user
  • Observe real work
  • Use real examples and artifacts
  • Artifact An object created by human
    workmanship
  • Interview while she/he is working

11
Master-Apprentice model
  • Master Apprentice model allows customer to
    teach us what they do!
  • Master does the work talks about it while
    working
  • We interrupt to ask questions as they go
  • Each step reminds the user of thenext
  • Skill knowledge is usually tacit(cant put it in
    books)
  • Studying many tasks, thedesigner can abstract
    away
  • Sometimes literal apprenticeshipworks
    (Matsushita Home Bakery)!

12
Key distinctions about context
  • Contextual Inquiry
  • Ongoing experience concrete data
  • Objective
  • Spontaneous, as it happens
  • What customers actually need
  • Interviews, Surveys, Focus Groups
  • Summary data abstractions
  • Subjective
  • Limited by reliability of human memory
  • What customers think say they want

13
Elements of User's Context Pay Attention to all
of these
  • User's work space
  • User's work
  • User's work intentions
  • User's words
  • Tools used
  • How people work together
  • Business goals (e.g. always buy from XYZ Ltd.)
  • Organizational and cultural structure

14
Standard Contextual InquiryWork-based Interview
  • Use when
  • Product or process already exists
  • Or a near competitors
  • User is able to complete a task while you observe
  • Work can be interrupted

15
Interview note-taking
  • When to take notes?
  • Any observations not being recorded
  • Note taking can help you pay closer attention
  • Notes lead to faster turn-around
  • Do not let it interfere with interviewing
  • How to record?
  • What the user says in quotes
  • What the user does plain text
  • Your interpretation in parentheses
  • Write fast!

16
Reasons for variation on the standard work-based
interview
  • Different goals
  • Designing a known product
  • Know the competition
  • Addressing a new work domain
  • Study what replacing
  • Designing for a new technology
  • Types of tasks that make work-based inquiry
    impractical
  • Intermittent instrument or keep logs
  • Uninterruptible video and review later
  • Extremely long point sample and review

17
Partnership
  • Definition
  • A relationship characterized by close cooperation
  • Build an equitable relationship with the user
  • Suspend your assumptions and beliefs
  • Invite the user into the inquiry process
  • Information acquired through dialog
  • User is expert employ master/apprentice model
  • Encourage user to speak
  • Listen for non-verbal communications

18
Analysis
  • In the momentSimultaneous data collection and
    analysis during interview
  • Post interview
  • Using notes, tapes, and transcripts
  • Analysis by a group
  • Integrates multiple perspectives
  • Creates shared vision
  • Creates shared focus
  • Builds teams
  • Saves time

19
Focus
  • Focus is a perspective
  • We always have an entering focus
  • Better to make it explicit
  • Characteristics of focus
  • set of pre-conceivedassumptions and beliefs
  • reveals and conceals
  • Show me how you do
  • Decide what to ask about
  • Still use general questions
  • Not an interview!

20
Setting Focus
  • Form a team of stakeholders
  • Brainstorm questions, assumptions, design ideas.
  • Each group member brainstorms individually
  • Group meets and brainstorms
  • Delay evaluation during brainstorming
  • Record the items generated
  • Prune questions
  • Defer Qs that participants cannot answer
  • Conclusions about other peoples experiences
  • How large is the market?
  • Would you buy this product?

21
Key Benefits
  • Can be used early in development cycle
  • Defines user work problems and opportunities for
    improved products
  • Develops a partnership between engineering and
    customers
  • Creates a shared system vision for the whole
    design team
  • Combines with other development processes
  • Identifies both short-term and long-term product
    enhancements

22
Key Limits
  • Requires additional time and expense to set up
    customer site visits
  • Requires interviewing and analysis skills
  • Requires a method of tracking the large number of
    design ideas that result
  • Consider Design Rational (gIBIS)

23
Example of CI
  • Video of sample session with a eCommerce site
    http//www.cs.cmu.edu/bam/uicourse/EHCIcontexuali
    nquiry.mpg
  • See video of review of CI http//ilserver.sp.cs.c
    mu.edu/view.pl?id484 at timemark 010603
  • Issues to observe
  • Interview of work in progress, in context
  • Actual session of doing a task
  • Not an interview asking about possible tasks,
    etc.
  • Questions to clarify about routine, motivations
  • Why do certain actions need intent for actions
  • Notice problems (breakdowns)
  • Notice what happens that causes users to do
    something (triggers)
  • E.g. appearance of error messages, other
    feedback, external events (phone ringing), etc.

24
Summary
  • Think about the user community first
  • Who they are, what their lifestyles are, what
    youre assumptions about them are.
  • Selecting tasks
  • real tasks with reasonable functionality coverage
  • complete, specific tasks of what user wants to do
  • Contextual inquiry
  • way to answer the task analysis questions
  • interview observe real users
  • use the master-apprentice model to get them to
    teach you
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