Design of Distributed Systems Programming of Interactive Systems Lecture 3 Fredrik Kilander Wei Li.
Design Of Interactive Systems
-
Upload
nirmala-last -
Category
Technology
-
view
1.733 -
download
0
description
Transcript of Design Of Interactive Systems
![Page 1: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
1
OVERHEADS I: DESIGN OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS
•by MURRAY TUROFF•DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER AND INFORMATION SCIENCE•NEW JERSEY INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY•NEWARK NJ, 07102•TEL: 201 596 3399•© Copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 2: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
2
DESIGN METHODS
•COMPARISON / DIFFERENTIATING•DESIGNING / REQUIREMENTS•TASK UNDERSTANDING / MACRO•COGNITIVE UNDERSTANDING / MICRO•GROUP UNDERSTANDING / MICRO & MACRO
•ENHANCEMENTS / EVOLUTION•VISIONING / NORMATIVE•SOCIAL ENGINEERING•GOAL SETTING
![Page 3: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
3
ATMOSPHERE
•HUMAN COMPUTER
•SLOW RAPID•SLOPPY RIGOROUS•FORGETFUL PRECISE•BRILLIANT STUPID
•HOW TO DESIGN A COMMUNICATION BETWEEN THE TWO?
![Page 4: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
4
WHY INTERACTIVE
•ITERATIVE PROBLEM SOLVING•UNPREDICTABLE SEQUENCES•TOOL FLEXIBILITY•IMPOSSIBLE MANUALLY•COLLABORATION•ENHANCEMENT (SAVE TIME, EFFORT)•SPEED, QUANTITY, MEMORY
•ENJOYMENT•SUBLIMATING AND BEING BUSY
![Page 5: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
5
DESIGN ATMOSPHERE
•PERSONAL WORKSTATIONS•MEGABYTES OF CORE•OPTICAL DISKS•MANY MIPS•BROAD BAND COMMUNICATIONS
•USERS•HIGH COGNITIVE VARIABILITY•MANAGERIAL•PROBLEM SOLVERS•SCIENTIFIC AND ENGINEERING•CREATIVE
![Page 6: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
6
VIEWS OF THE WORLD
•REAL WORLD•OUTCOMES:VALIDATION
•REQUIREMENTS MODEL•SYSTEMS ANALYSIS: EVALUATION
•IMPLEMENTATION MODEL•SYSTEM DESIGN: TESTING
•INTERFACE MODEL•METAPHOR: SYSTEM OPACITY
•MENTAL MODEL•EXPERIENCE: FUNCTIONAL OPACITY
![Page 7: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
7
USER TYPES & MODES
•NOVICE, CASUAL, INTERMEDIARIES•EXPERIENCED•ROUTINE•FREQUENT•OPERATORS•PROBLEM SOLVERS•POWER•RESULTS:•DIFFERENT ROLES IN ONE SYSTEM•MULTIPLE INTERFACE METHODS
![Page 8: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
8
![Page 9: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
9
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 10: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
10
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•CRITERIA FOR FACTOR DIMENSIONS•CAN IT BE PERCEIVED•CAN IT BE MEASURED•REPRODUCIBLE•RELIABLE
•ORTHOGONAL•CAN IT GUIDE DESIGN•RELATE TO INTERFACE METHODS•CAN IT EVALUATE DESIGN•CAN IT SENSITIZE
![Page 11: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
11
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•FOUNDATION FACTORS•UNDERSTANDING & EASE OF LEARNING•SENSE OF CONTROL•EFFECTIVENESS•PSYCHOLOGICAL & SOCIOLOGICAL•ADMINISTRATIVE
![Page 12: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
12
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•FOUNDATION FACTORS•TIMELINESS•RESPONSIVENESS•RELIABILITY•ACCESSIBILITY / CONVINCE•EFFICIENCY / LEAST EFFORT•SECURITY•ACCURACY•PROTECTION / BULLET-PROOFING
![Page 13: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
13
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•UNDERSTANDING / EASE OF LEARNING•GUIDANCE•INFORMATIVENESS•CONCISENESS / BREVITY•CLARITY / SIMPLICITY•COMPREHENSION•SEGMENTATION / DECOMPOSITION•CONSISTENCY•RETENTION•SPECIFICITY•FAMILIARITY
![Page 14: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
14
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•SENSE OF CONTROL I•LEVERAGE / MODIFIABILITY•MANIPULABILITY•CLOSURE / CONFIRMATION / NOTIFICATION•FEEDBACK•SENSE OF CAUSALITY•MULTI-TASKING•PROCESS CONTROL / ESCAPE / INTERRUPT
![Page 15: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
15
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•SENSE OF CONTROL II•FORGIVENESS•TRANSPARENCY•FLEXIBILITY / COGNITIVE ADOPTION•PREDICTABILITY / REGULARITY•CONTEXTUAL VISIBILITY•TRACKING•BACKTRACKING / AUDITING•FORECASTING / ANTICIPATING•BACKUP / UNDO
![Page 16: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
16
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•EFFECTIVENESS I•TASK FUNCTIONALITY•GENERALITY•MATCHING•COMPLETENESS•ROBUSTNESS•ABSTRACTION•ADAPTABILITY
![Page 17: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
17
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•EFFECTIVENESS II•INTEGRATION / CONNECTIVITY•RESILIENCY / ROBUSTNESS / RICHNESS•RELEVANCE•PRECISION
![Page 18: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
18
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•PSYCHOLOGICAL & SOCIOLOGICAL I•ETHICAL / HONESTY•AESTHETIC / PLEASING / ARTFUL•INTERESTING / CHALLENGING / FUN•SELF IMAGE ENHANCEMENT•EXPECTATIONS / MOTIVATION•PEER RELATIONS / STATUS•SENSE OF COMMUNITY•HUMANIZATION / POLITE
![Page 19: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
19
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•PSYCHOLOGICAL & SOCIOLOGICAL II•SATISFACTION•SYSTEM•GROUP•TASK
•MOTIVATION•EXPECTATIONS•PERCEIVED UTILITY•FEELING OF PARTICIPATION
![Page 20: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
20
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•ADMINISTRATIVE•TRAINING / DOCUMENTATION•MAINTENANCE•JOB ENHANCEMENT•HUMAN HELP•ORGANIZATION RELATIONSHIPS•SYSTEM EVOLUTION / MODIFIABILITY•EVALUATION / FEEDBACK•CHARGING POLICIES•CONFIDENCE
![Page 21: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
21
DIMENSIONS OF INTERFACE DESIGN
•CONFLICTS AND TRADEOFFS: EXAMPLES
•COMPREHENSION SEGMENTATION•CONSISTENCY EFFICIENCY•CONSISTENCY COGNITIVE ADOPTION•CONCISENESS INFORMATIVE•CONCISENESS CLOSURE•RESILIENCY EASE OF LEARNING•TASK GENERALITY TASK MATCHING•SPECIFICITY FAMILIARITY•LEVERAGE MANIPULABILITY
![Page 22: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
22
BASIC PROBLEM
•PROPER LEVEL OF TOOLS•TOO PRIMITIVE:•DIFFICULT TO WORK WITH
•TOO MACRO:•INFLEXIBLE
•GULF OF EXECUTION•GOALS, INTENTIONS, TO ACTIONS
•GULF OF EVALUATION•DISPLAY, INTERPRETATION, TO EVALUATION
![Page 23: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
23
CONTROL SYSTEM VIEW
•INPUT - CONTROL•OUTPUT - RESULT•SYSTEM - BLACK BOX•OBJECTIVE - COMPARATOR•LAW OF REQUISITE VARIETY
![Page 24: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
24
![Page 25: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
25
EVALUATION OF INTERFACES
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 26: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
26
EVALUATION OF INTERFACES
•INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING - HUMAN FACTORS•PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL•PROTOCOL ANALYSIS•CONTROLLED EXPERIMENTS•FIELD TRIALS•INTERVIEWS•SURVEYS•LONGITUDINAL STUDIES
![Page 27: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
27
EVALUATION OF INTERFACES I
•MANAGEMENT SCIENCES - PERCEPTIONS•SYSTEM MONITORING•USER SATISFACTION•COST - BENEFITS / PRODUCTIVITY•EFFICIENCY•QUALITY•OPPORTUNITIES
•INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING•HUMAN FACTORS
![Page 28: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
28
EVALUATION OF INTERFACES II
•PSYCHOLOGICAL•COGNITIVE PROCESSES•HUMAN PROBLEM SOLVING
•SOCIOLOGICAL•GROUP PROCESSES•ENVIRONMENTAL INTERACTION
•EVALUATION OF INTERFACES
![Page 29: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
29
EVALUATION OF INTERFACES III
•ANTHROPOLOGICAL•METAPHORS•PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
•ARCHAEOLOGICAL•ARTIFACTS
•PHILOSOPHICAL•VIRTUAL REALITY
![Page 30: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
30
APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING
•EXPERIMENTAL•FEATURES RELATIONSHIPS•COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY FACTORS•MODELS OF TOTAL SYSTEMS•HUMAN•TASKS•COMPUTERS
•FIELD TRIALS AND PROTOTYPING•ARTIFACTS AND METAPHORS•SOCIAL ENGINEERING
![Page 31: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
31
EXPERIMENTS
•FIXED MESSAGE FORMAT VS. USER DESIGNED•LESS NOTE TAKING•GREATER COMPREHENSION
•DUAL MODE EDITOR•AFTER 16-20 HOURS USERS SWITCHED TO COMMANDS•USED HELP MORE IN COMMAND MODE•MORE ERRORS
![Page 32: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
32
MENU CRITERIA
•TIME TO CREATE MENU < CHOICE TIME•MENU EXTENSIBLE BY USER•THEN BETTER THAN COMMANDS EVEN FOR EXPERTS
![Page 33: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
33
SPECIFIC DESIGN FAULTS I
•POOR INTERACTIVE DIALOGUE•LONGER TO DO THAN MANUALLY•NO TOLERANCE FOR HUMAN ERRORS•NO FLEXIBLE PARSING (RIGIDITY)•WRONG FUNCTIONALITY•START-STOP HASSLE•POOR DOCUMENTATION AND HELP•INCONSISTENT METAPHORS
![Page 34: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
34
SPECIFIC DESIGN FAULTS II
•MOST COMMON PROBLEM: FLEXIBILITY•APPLICABILITY TO BROAD RANGE OF TASKS•MULTIPLE APPROACHES TO A GIVEN TASK•MULTIPLE WAYS OF INVOKING•ADAPT TO DIFFERENT•USER STYLES•USER TYPES
•GREATER FLEXIBILITY IMPLIES MORE COMPLEX SYSTEM
![Page 35: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
35
PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACTS
•FISHBOWL•BULLY•PEEPHOLE•CONCRETE•CLUTTER•PEOPLE ANGST•COMPUTER ANGST•RORSCHACH BLOT
![Page 36: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
36
PHASES OF USER EVOLUTION
•UNCERTAINTY•INSIGHT•INCORPORATION•SATURATION
![Page 37: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/37.jpg)
37
PSYCHOLOGICAL ROLES
•EVALUATOR MAGICIAN•HELPER ENTERTAINER•COMPANION CHALLENGER•FOE MENTOR•ACCOMPLICE PRODUCER•OVERSEER DICTATOR•PRIEST SERVANT•PICKY PARENT GOD
![Page 38: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/38.jpg)
38
DESIGN INTRODUCTION
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 39: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/39.jpg)
39
CONTROL FUNCTION EXAMPLES
•GO BACK (HOW FAR)•GO FORWARD (HOW FAR)•GO ELSEWHERE (HOW FAR)•PRINT/FILE (HOW MUCH)•OBJECT, SCREEN, HALF SCREEN, PAGE, LIST
•INTERACTION STATE, TASK, FUNCTION, PROCESS, TRANSFER, UP/DOWN LOAD•CONFIRM, QUIT, HELP, UNDO, ESCAPE, FINISH, INTERRUPT, CONTINUE, TRANSFER, QUIT, SAVE, EXECUTE, OPEN, CLOSE, TRANSFER, COPY, MOVE
![Page 40: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/40.jpg)
40
INTERACTION METHODS
•MENUS, COMMANDS•LISTS, FORMS, DIALOGUE•WINDOWS, ICONS, GUI•DIRECT MANIPULATION•MIMICKING / RECORDING•ANIMATION AND MODELS•LANGUAGES•SCRIPTING•VIRTUAL REALITIES•AI AND EXPERT SYSTEMS
![Page 41: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/41.jpg)
41
DESIGN COMPONENTS I
•GOALS AND OBJECTIVES•TASKS•SYSTEM METAPHOR•SYSTEM ARTIFACTS
•OBJECTS / SUB-OBJECTS•OBJECT PARTS•SHORTEST, ABSTRACT, CONTENT
•FUNCTIONS ON OBJECTS•GENERIC AND EXPLICIT•STRATEGIC CHOICE SETS•REACTIVE CHOICE SETS•CONTROLS
![Page 42: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/42.jpg)
42
DESIGN COMPONENTS II
•MODIFIERS AND STATUS STATES•SUBSETS, TRACKING
•LATERAL LINKAGES•SHARED PROCESSES•LIST PROCESSING•SEARCHING
•FORMATS•SCREEN LAYOUTS•WORKSPACE, STATUS AREAS•CONTROL AREA, MESSAGE AREA
![Page 43: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/43.jpg)
43
DESIGN COMPONENTS III
•USER INTERACTION STATES•INTERACTION PROCESSES•USER OBJECT LISTS•USER TASKS•ALTERNATIVE SETS•PROCESSES AND CLOSURE•ERROR CONDITIONS•SYSTEM MESSAGES
![Page 44: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/44.jpg)
44
MODEL RELATIONSHIPS
•MENTAL MODEL TO REAL WORLD: EXPERIENCE•REQUIREMENTS MODEL TO IMPLEMENTATION MODEL: TESTING•REAL WORLD TO IMPLEMENTATION MODEL: VALIDATION•MENTAL MODEL TO IMPLEMENTATION MODEL: EVALUATION•MENTAL MODEL TO INTERFACE MODEL: LEARNING AND TRAINING
![Page 45: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/45.jpg)
45
MODELS
•COGNITIVE DISSONANCE:•MENTAL MODEL TO INTERFACE MODEL:•FUNCTIONAL OPACITY
•IMPLEMENTATION MODEL TO INTERFACE MODEL:•SYSTEM OPACITY
![Page 46: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/46.jpg)
46
INFORMATION DOMAINS OF USERS I
•COMMON IS SUPPORT LEVELS•SINGLE FUNCTION TASKS:•SIMPLE INQUIRY / CALCULATIONS / MESSAGING
•STRUCTURING:•ORGANIZING / FILTERING / SUMMARIZING
•STATUS BRIEFING / REPORT GENERATION•TRACKING / MONITORING
![Page 47: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/47.jpg)
47
INFORMATION DOMAINS OF USERS II
•CURRENT INDIVIDUAL CHALLENGES•EXCEPTION REPORTING•CREATION TASKS•MODELING / STRUCTURING•DIAGNOSIS•DISCOVERY•HYPOTHESIS TESTING AND ANALYSIS
•CURRENT GROUP CHALLENGES•PLANNING AND DECISION ANALYSIS•DECISION IMPLEMENTATION•COMMAND AND CONTROL
![Page 48: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/48.jpg)
48
![Page 49: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/49.jpg)
49
FOLKLORE OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 50: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/50.jpg)
50
FOLKLORE OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS I
•USERS:•FAILURE TO NOTICE EXPLICIT INSTRUCTIONS•DO THE UNANTICIPATED AND THE FORBIDDEN•FORMULATE OPINION ON LITTLE KNOWLEDGE•MISINTERPRET MEANINGS•WILL NOT ASK FOR HELP•WILL NOT REPORT BUGS
![Page 51: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/51.jpg)
51
FOLKLORE OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS II
•USERS:•WILL NOT APPRECIATE IMPLEMENTATION EFFORT•ONLY APPRECIATE UTILITY TO THEM•WILL FALL INTO HABITS•WILL NOT READ MANUALS•NOT UNDERSTAND DOCUMENTATION
![Page 52: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/52.jpg)
52
FOLKLORE OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS III
•DESIGNERS:•EXPECT USERS TO LEARN WHOLE SYSTEM•TO UNDERSTAND WHOLE SYSTEM•WILL RE-INVENT THE WHEEL•TREAT ALL USERS THE SAME•WILL NOT TAKE CRITICISM WELL•WILL NOT EXPLAIN THEIR DESIGN•CANNOT TEACH USERS
![Page 53: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/53.jpg)
53
FOLKLORE OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS IV
•GENERAL I:•BEST WAY OF USING COMPUTER NOT EVIDENT TO USER•WRONG TO AUTOMATE, BUT EASY TO SELL•DESCRIPTIVE DESIGNS CAN BE PRESCRIPTIVE•USER BEHAVIOUR WILL CHANGE AND EVOLVE•DESIGNER HAS LINE OF CREDIT
![Page 54: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/54.jpg)
54
FOLKLORE OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS V
•GENERAL II:•DESIGNER KNOWLEDGE OF TASK CRITICAL•TWO OR MORE SHOULD DESIGN•ROLE FOR OMBUDSMAN•MULTIPLE DESIGN ITERATIONS DESIRABLE•ALLOW USER TO "CHUNK" PROBLEMS•USER FRIENDLY - EXPERIENCED HOSTILE
![Page 55: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/55.jpg)
55
FOLKLORE OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS VI
•GENERAL III:•VALUE WILL OVERCOME POOR INTERFACE•BEST SYSTEM IS THE FIRST LEARNED•EFFICIENT COMPUTER DATA STRUCTURE MAY BE INEFFICIENT FOR THE USER
![Page 56: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/56.jpg)
56
FOLKLORE OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS VII
•GENERAL IV:•USERS LEARN BEST BY TRAIL AND ERROR•EFFICIENT USE OF MACHINE MAY EQUAL INEFFICIENT USE OF PEOPLE•EXPERIMENT LEADS THEORY•DESIGNERS SHOULD KNOW APPLICATION AREA•REMEMBER THE MAGIC NUMBER 7 +- 2•A SYSTEM EVOLVES OR DIES
![Page 57: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/57.jpg)
57
FOLKLORE OF INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS VIII
•GENERAL V:•EVALUATING THE USER NOT A SYSTEM TASK•USERS WANT TO IGNORE SYSTEM•INVOLVE THE USER IN THE DESIGN PROCESS•ERROR DETECTION AS SOON AS POSSIBLE•USERS SHOULD HAVE CONTROL
![Page 58: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/58.jpg)
58
USER ROLES AND TYPES
•NOVICE, CASUAL, ROUTINE•INTERMEDIARY•FREQUENT•OPERATOR•EXPERIENCED•PROBLEM SOLVER•POWER•RESULTS:•DIFFERENT ROLES IN ONE SYSTEM•MULTIPLE INTERFACE METHODS
![Page 59: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/59.jpg)
59
USER RESPONSE TO INADEQUATE SYSTEM
•DIS-USE: TURN TO OTHER SOURCES•MIS-USE: USING INAPPROPRIATE WAYS•PARTIAL USE: USE OF WRONG SUBSET•DISTANT USE: USE OF INTERMEDIARY•MODIFICATION OF TASK: CHANGE TASK TO FIT SYSTEM•COMPENSATORY ACTIVITY: USER HAS TO DO MORE•DIRECT PROGRAMMING: USER MODIFIES SYSTEM•NON-USE: AVOIDING THE SYSTEM
![Page 60: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/60.jpg)
60
![Page 61: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/61.jpg)
61
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 62: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/62.jpg)
62
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS I
•OBJECTIVE: TO DISCOVER THE PROCESS A PERSON GOES THROUGH IN SOLVING A PROBLEM•USES: LEARNING COGNITIVE PROCESSES, DEVELOPING EXPERT SYSTEM MATERIAL, EVALUATING INTERFACES
![Page 63: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/63.jpg)
63
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS II
•ASSUMPTION: COGNITIVE PROCESSES THAT GENERATE VERBALIZATION ARE A SUBSET OF THOSE THAT GENERATE BEHAVIOUR•EXAMPLE: "LISA LEARNING," BY CARROLL AND MAZUR, IEEE COMPUTER, NOVEMBER 1986.
![Page 64: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/64.jpg)
64
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS III
•INVERSE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE AMOUNT OF TRUST AND HOW MUCH NEEDS TO BE REPORTED VERBALLY.•1. DO YOU KNOW THE CAPITAL OF SWEDEN?•2. WHICH OF THE THREE: OSLO, STOCKHOLM, OR COPENHAGEN IS THE CAPITAL?•3. NAME THE CAPITAL OF SWEDEN.
•RETROSPECT TO 1: TELL WHAT YOU WERE THINKING
![Page 65: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/65.jpg)
65
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS IV
•TALK ALOUD, THINK ALOUD MODE: WHILE INFORMATION IS ATTENDED.•CONCURRENT PROBING MODE: WHILE IN SHORT-TERM MEMORY.•RETROSPECTIVE PROBING MODE: AFTER COMPLETION OF TASK
![Page 66: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/66.jpg)
66
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS V CONDITIONS
•SUBJECT ASKED TO VERBALIZE WHAT THEY ARE THINKING•SUBJECT IS NOT BEING EVALUATED•OBSERVER MUST NOT PARTICIPATE IN PROCESS OR AID SUBJECT•SUBJECT PROVIDING KNOWLEDGE OF HOW THEY SOLVE A PROBLEM OR HOW THEY LEARN A SYSTEM
![Page 67: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/67.jpg)
67
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS VICODING
•NEED A CODING SCHEME FOR VERBALIZATIONS•EXAMPLE I:•INTENTIONS: GOALS, SHALL, WILL, MUST, HAVE TO•COGNITIONS: CURRENT ATTENTION SITUATION•PLANNING: IF X THAN Y•EVALUATION: YES, NO, DAMIT, FINE
![Page 68: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/68.jpg)
68
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS VIICODING
•EXAMPLE II:•SURVEYING GIVEN INFORMATION•GENERATING NEW INFORMATION•DEVELOPING A HYPOTHESIS•UNSUCCESSFUL SOLUTIONS•CHANGING CONDITIONS OF THE PROBLEM•SELF REFERENCE OR CRITICISM•SILENCE
![Page 69: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/69.jpg)
69
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS VIII
•EXPERTS ON A PROBLEM VERBALIZE A LOT MORE THAN NON EXPERTS (DOUBLE).•VERBALIZATION OCCURS ONLY 30% TO 50% OF THE TIME•PEOPLE CANNOT VERBALIZE WHEN:•READING TEXT•DOING INTENSE COGNITIVE ACTIVITY•MAKING CHOICES
•PEOPLE HAVE TO SLOW DOWN TO VERBALIZE
![Page 70: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/70.jpg)
70
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS IX
•HOW TO INCREASE VERBALIZATION•1. HOLD BACK STIMULUS OR ENCOURAGE SLOWNESS•2. SEGMENT STIMULUS•3. INTERRUPT WITH PRE-ARRANGED SIGNAL OR SET POINT
![Page 71: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/71.jpg)
71
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS X OBJECTIVES
•OBJECTIVES FOR INTERACTIVE SYSTEMS:•DETERMINE THEIR UNDERSTANDINGS OF TERMS IN THE INTERFACE•UNDERSTAND THE CAUSE OF ERRORS OR MISINTERPRETATIONS•DETERMINING MISSING FUNCTIONALITY OR USER REQUIREMENTS•DETERMINING THE UTILITY OF THE METAPHOR FOR LEARNING•DETERMINING THE UTILITY OF HELP AND GUIDANCE
![Page 72: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/72.jpg)
72
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS XIAPPROACH 1
•ASK THE USER TO DESCRIBE WHAT HE OR SHE IS DOING OUTLOUD•TO GO THROUGH THE TERMS ON THE SCREEN AND EXPLAIN WHAT THEY THINK THEY MEAN•TO TRY TO FORECAST WHAT A COMMAND CHOICE WILL DO•CAN RECORD, TAPE, AND/OR MAKE NOTES
![Page 73: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/73.jpg)
73
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS XIIAPPROACH 2
•EXPLAIN IT IS SYSTEM BEING EVALUATED, NOT USER•THERE TO OBSERVE ONLY, CANNOT HELP USER•ONLY ASK USER TO VERBALIZE IF IT IS UNCLEAR AS TO WHAT THEY ARE DOING
![Page 74: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/74.jpg)
74
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS XIIIAPPROACH 3
•ASK TO EXPLAIN:•1. WHAT THEY ARE TRYING TO DO•2. WHAT CONFUSION OR CONCERNS THEY HAVE•3. WHAT THEY EXPECT TO HAPPEN NEXT•4. WHAT THEY DON'T KNOW THE MEANING OF
![Page 75: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/75.jpg)
75
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS XIV APPROACH 4
•GIVE HELP ONLY IF USER IS AT A DEAD END•USERS DO NOT ALWAYS KNOW WHY THEY DO THINGS•SAVE RETROSPECTIVE QUESTIONS FOR END
![Page 76: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/76.jpg)
76
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS XVADVANTAGES
•A LOT LESS EFFORT THAN OTHER APPROACHES•CAN BE DONE ON PROTOTYPE OR MOCKUP•LEARNING HOW USER APPROACHES TASK•CAN LEARN ATTITUDE•RAPID FEEDBACK FROM SMALL SAMPLES
![Page 77: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/77.jpg)
77
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS XVIREQUIREMENTS
•REQUIREMENTS:•SUBJECTS MUST BE REPRESENTATIVE•INSTRUCTIONS SIMPLE•YOU MUST BE OBSERVER ONLY
![Page 78: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/78.jpg)
78
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS XVIIQUESTIONS
•CAN ASK:•WHAT ARE YOU THINKING?•WHAT DOES THAT TERM MEAN?
•SHOULD NOT ASK:•WHY DID YOU DO THAT!•WHAT DOES A MESSAGE DO?
![Page 79: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/79.jpg)
79
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS XVIIIHOW TO 1
•A ONE PAGE EXPLANATION TO THE SUBJECT•A SET OF WRITTEN TASKS IN USER TERMS•SUBJECT SHOULD SPEND ABOUT ONE HOUR•A CATEGORISATION SCHEME FOR RECORDING•TAPE RECORD THEIR VERBALIZATIONS
![Page 80: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/80.jpg)
80
PROTOCOL ANALYSIS XIXHOW TO 2
•RETROSPECTIVE QUESTIONNAIRE FOR END•RETENTION OF MAJOR CONCEPTS•PERCEIVED UTILITY OF FEATURES
•DO NOT TRY TO TEST EVERYTHING•AT LEAST THREE SUBJECTS ON SAME TASKS•BE SPECIFIC ABOUT USER EXPLAINING CHOICE THEY ARE ABOUT TO MAKE
![Page 81: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/81.jpg)
81
![Page 82: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/82.jpg)
82
GUIDELINES
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 83: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/83.jpg)
83
MODELS I
•COGNITIVE MODEL•DESCRIPTION OF MENTAL PROCESS BY WHICH HUMAN PERFORMS A TASK
•USER CONCEPTUAL/MENTAL MODEL•DESCRIPTION OF THE MODEL OF THE SYSTEM THAT THE USER UNDERSTANDS
•SYSTEM METAPHOR•DESIGNERS MODEL OF THE SYSTEM INTENDED TO BE THE ONE THE USER UNDERSTANDS
![Page 84: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/84.jpg)
84
MODELS II
•IMPLEMENTATION MODEL•MODEL USED TO DESCRIBE THE INTERNAL SYSTEM
•REQUIREMENTS MODEL•MODEL DEVELOPED THROUGH SYSTEMS ANALYSIS PROCESS
•REAL WORLD MODEL•WHAT OCCURS IN THE PHYSICAL WORLD
![Page 85: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/85.jpg)
85
GUIDELINES I
•HIGHLIGHTING•COLOR, SOUND, REVERSE VIDEO, FLASHING, SIZE, FONTS, BOXING, WINDOWING•PURPOSE: ATTENTION GETTING AND FEEDBACK
•SCREEN LAYOUT•STATUS, WORK, CONTROL, ERROR, HELP
![Page 86: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/86.jpg)
86
GUIDELINES II
•TELL USER WHAT HE/SHE IS WORKING ON•HIGHLIGHT WHAT USER HAS SELECTED•PUT DATA IN SOME ORDER•LONG STRINGS/NUMBERS BROKEN UP INTO MEANINGFUL CHUNKS•106677471812 1066-742-1812
•SCREEN DENSITY 25% TO 50%, 30% USUALLY IDEAL
![Page 87: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/87.jpg)
87
GUIDELINES III
•ORDER/GROUP MATERIAL: SEQUENTIAL, CLASSIFIED, HIERARCHICAL•MENU CHOICES: 5 TO 9 (7+-2)•GROUP MENU ITEMS:•CHANGE / NO CHANGE•TWO DIMENSIONAL ( 5 X 5 = 25 )
![Page 88: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/88.jpg)
88
GUIDELINES IV
•MENU TYPES•STRATEGIC MENUS / CONTROL PANELS•MENU TREES / OUTLINES•POPUP/PULLDOWN MENUS•LISTS (MULTIPLE CHOICES)•OBJECT MENUS (ICONS)•ACTION MENUS•MODIFIER MENUS
![Page 89: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/89.jpg)
89
GUIDELINES V
•CHOICE SELECTION•CURSOR KEYS / MOUSE•SELECTION BAR•NUMBERS•LETTERS•ABBREVIATION
•IMPORTANT FACTORS•FREQUENCY OF USE•GROUPINGS OF COMMANDS•HABIT & ERROR AVOIDANCE•CONTROLS
![Page 90: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/90.jpg)
90
GUIDELINES VI
•SEPARATE PARAGRAPHS BY BLANK LINES•USER STANDARD REPRESENTATIONS: HH:MM:SS•USE COMPLETE WORDS•AVOID HYPHENATION•USE VERTICALLY ALIGNED LISTS•USE OUTLINES AND BULLETS•MOST SIGNIFICANT WORDS FIRST•MINIMIZE PUNCTUATION: CPU
![Page 91: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/91.jpg)
91
GUIDELINES VII
•LABELING•LABEL OR IDENTIFICATION FOR AN OBJECT•DESCRIPTIVE TITLE, PHRASE•SPEED SCAN OF SHORT VERSION OF OBJECT•FULL STATUS DESCRIPTION OF AN OBJECT•APPLIES TO CONTENT OBJECTS, MENUS, SCREENS, STATES
![Page 92: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/92.jpg)
92
GUIDELINES VIII
•USER SHOULD BE ABLE TO CONTROL AMOUNT OF INFORMATION•ALL MEANINGFUL ALTERNATIVES IN ONE SCREEN•CONSISTENCY IN USE OF TERMS•SPECIFICITY OF TERMS DESIRABLE•FAMILIARITY OF TERMS DESIRABLE
![Page 93: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/93.jpg)
93
GUIDELINES IXX
•ALLOW SYNONYMS WHERE POSSIBLE•ALWAYS CONFIRM CRITICAL ACTIONS (E.G. DELETE)•MINIMIZE NUMBER OF MODES OF INTERACTION (E.G. EDIT MODE)•DISPLAY ACTION TAKING PLACE (E.G. STATUS)•MINIMIZE SUPERFLUOUS TASKS (E.G. LOGON)
![Page 94: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/94.jpg)
94
GUIDELINES XX
•PROMPTS AS SOON AS POSSIBLE AFTER ERRORS•USER GIVEN IMMEDIATE CHANCE TO CORRECT•IDENTIFY ERRORS SPECIFICALLY•PROVIDE RECOVERY INFORMATION•+UNDO OR +OOPS•SHOULD EXPLAIN WHY WHEN SOMETHING CAN NOT BE DONE
![Page 95: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/95.jpg)
95
GUIDELINES XXI
•ALLOW USER TO STAY IN ONE MODE OF ENTRY AS LONG AS POSSIBLE•ALLOW ENTRY STACKING OR ANSWER AHEADS•USE LOWER AND UPPER CASE
![Page 96: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/96.jpg)
96
![Page 97: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/97.jpg)
97
INDEXING
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 98: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/98.jpg)
98
INDEXING I
•HIERARCHICAL•SINGLE LOCATION IN TREE•PRECISE DEFINITIONS•E.G. 1. 1.1 1.2 1.1.1•E.G. OUTLINES, MS/DOS FILES•RIGID, DIFFICULT TO ADAPT
![Page 99: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/99.jpg)
99
INDEXING II
•NETWORK (LATERAL LINKS)•SINGLE LOCATION IN NETWORK•PRECISE RELATIONSHIPS•E.G. BOOK INDEX, CITATION INDEX•E.G. HYPERTEXT•LACK OF GLOBAL VIEW
![Page 100: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/100.jpg)
100
INDEXING III
•SUBJECT HEADINGS•MULTIPLE SUBJECT HEADINGS•FIXED CATEGORIES, NO STRUCTURE•PRECISE DEFINITIONS•E.G. COMPUTERS IN CHEMISTRY AND INTEGRAL EQUATIONS
![Page 101: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/101.jpg)
101
INDEXING IV
•KEY WORD AND COORDINATE SYSTEMS•FIXED KEY WORDS•FREE KEY WORDS•MULTIPLE KEYS•COORDINATES FOR PROPERTIES E.G. TALL, MEDIUM, SHORT
![Page 102: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/102.jpg)
102
INDEXING V
•SYNTACTIC LANGUAGES 1•TAGGED DESCRIPTORS•QUALIFIED KEYS•E.G. TANK.WEAPON, TANK.PETROLEUM
![Page 103: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/103.jpg)
103
INDEXING VI
•SYNTACTIC LANGUAGES 2•FACETED INDEX•SEPARATE DIMENSIONS•E.G., QUANTITY, STYLE, COLOR•E.G., FOR LEATHER, WINE, METAL ALLOYS•E.G., AUTHOR, TITLE, SOURCE•E.G., STEEL, COMPONENT, INDUSTRY
•MIXED INDEXES•UNIVERSAL DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION
![Page 104: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/104.jpg)
104
INDEXING VII
•UNIVERSAL DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION•341.67:623.454.8(094.2)
•341.67: DISARMAMENT, LIMITATION AND CONTROL OF WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION•623.45: AMMUNITION, PYROTECHNIC DEVICES, WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION•623.454.8: ACTIVE RAYS, ATOMIC NUCLEAR (THERMO) WEAPONS•094.2: HISTORICAL SOURCES (09), INTERNATIONAL TREATIES
![Page 105: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/105.jpg)
105
INDEXING VIII
•PHRASES•SHORT PHRASES, TITLES•E.G. KWIC INDEX•E.G. CHAPTER HEADINGS
•NATURAL LANGUAGE•E.G. ABSTRACTS
![Page 106: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/106.jpg)
106
INDEXING EFFECTIVENESS IX
RELEVANT NON-RELEVANT•RETRIEVED A B•NOT RETRIEVED C D•PRECISION = A / (A+B)•RECALL = A / (A+C)•SPECIFICITY = D / (B+D)
•SEARCH EFFICIENCY = (RECALL)
(SPECIFICITY)
![Page 107: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/107.jpg)
107
INDEXING EFFECTIVENESS X
•TIMELINESS (UPDATING)•ACCURACY•COMPLETENESS (ALL IN DATABASE)•FORM OF DATA (E.G. SUMMARY, RAW DATA)•SUBJECTIVE / OBJECTIVE•ADOPTION•HISTORICAL RELEVANCE
![Page 108: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/108.jpg)
108
INDEXING XI
•INDEX TYPE• AMBIGUITY EXPRESSIVE CONCISE•HIERARCHICAL• LOW LOW HIGH•NETWORK•SUBJECTS•FIXED KEYS•FREE KEYS•TAGGED DESCRIPTORS•FACETED INDEXES•PHRASES•NATURAL LANGUAGE• HIGH HIGH LOW
![Page 109: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/109.jpg)
109
INDEXING XII
•INDEX TYPE• RETRIEVAL SELECTION ADOPTION• EFFORT EFFORT EFFORT•HIERARCHICAL• LOW HIGH HIGH•NETWORK•SUBJECTS•FIXED KEYS•FREE KEYS LOW•TAGGED DESCRIPTORS•FACETED INDEXES•PHRASES•NATURAL LANGUAGE• HIGH LOW HIGH
![Page 110: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/110.jpg)
110
INDEXING XIII
•INDEX TYPE IDEAL USE•HIERARCHICAL•MACRO, WELL STRUCTURED
•NETWORK•MICRO, STRUCTURED RELATIONSHIPS
•SUBJECTS•MACRO, STRUCTURED CONCEPTS
•FIXED KEYS•FREE KEYS•MICRO, UNSTRUCTURED
![Page 111: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/111.jpg)
111
INDEXING XIV
•TAGGED DESCRIPTORS•FACETED INDEXES
•MICRO, STRUCTURED FACTORS•PHRASES
•MACRO, SEMI STRUCTURED•NATURAL LANGUAGE
•MACRO, UNSTRUCTURED
![Page 112: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/112.jpg)
112
INDEXING XV
•ZIPF'S LAW•LOG FREQUENCY OF TERMS IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE ARE LINEAR WITH LOG OF RANK ORDER•USED TO DETERMINE INDEX TERMS•HIGH FREQUENCY USELESS•LOW FREQUENCY USELESS FOR KEYS LEFT•TERMS DIFFERENT FROM NORMAL ENGLISH
•LEADS TO PRINCIPLE OF LEAST HUMAN EFFORT
![Page 113: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/113.jpg)
113
![Page 114: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/114.jpg)
114
USER & TASK PROPERTIES
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 115: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/115.jpg)
115
USERS AND TASKS
•INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES•ABILITIES, SKILLS, BACKGROUNDS COGNITIVE STYLE•DATA DIFFICULT TO USE BY DESIGNERS•IS USED IN SELECTION OF JOBS•OFTEN TIED TO TASK WHICH IS EASIER TO DEAL WITH•VERY USEFUL TO HAVE TASK TAXONOMY•DESIGNERS FAMILIAR WITH TASK DOMAIN USUALLY DO BETTER JOB
![Page 116: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/116.jpg)
116
ERROR ANALYSIS
•ERROR FREQUENCY ANALYSIS CAN BE VERY INDICATIVE OF DESIGN PROBLEMS•SINGLE MOST IMPORTANT MONITORING FUNCTION•SYNTACTIC ERRORS CAN BE USED TO TRIGGER LEARNING AIDS•CONCEPTUAL ERRORS WHERE THE CURRENT CHALLENGE IS
![Page 117: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/117.jpg)
117
USER TASKS
•TRAP OF DESIGNING A SYSTEM WHICH REINFORCES CURRENT USER BEHAVIOUR•MICRO AND MACRO UNDERSTANDING OF TASK•MICRO = COGNITIVE LEVEL•MACRO = FUNCTIONAL LEVEL
•PREDICTING WHAT HAS NOT BEEN POSSIBLE•EXAMPLE: CLASSIFYING COMMUNICATIONS OF A MANAGER
![Page 118: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/118.jpg)
118
USER TASKS
•PAPER SIMULATION•USER OBSERVATION•PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION•PROTOCOL ANALYSIS APPLIED TO TASK•PROTOTYPING ALTERNATIVES•MOCK UPS (DEMO2)
![Page 119: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/119.jpg)
119
TASK MODEL APPROACHES I
•CONTROL SYSTEM MODELS•PHYSIOLOGICAL•SPEED/ERROR ASSESSMENT
•NETWORK MODELS•STATISTICAL•BEHAVIOUR PATTERNS
•DECISION THEORY MODELS•TASK STRATEGIES•E.G., SEARCHES
•INFORMATION PROCESSING MODELS•MEMORY, ATTENTION•RECOGNITION
![Page 120: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/120.jpg)
120
TASK MODEL APPROACHES II
•PROBLEM SOLVING MODELS•MACRO BEHAVIOUR•GOALS, OBJECTIVES
•COGNITIVE MODELS•MICRO BEHAVIOUR•SCANNING, SPECIFICITY, ETC.
•MENTAL (METAPHOR) MODELS•LEARNING•COMPREHENSION
![Page 121: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/121.jpg)
121
PROBLEM OF TASK ALLOCATION:
•WHAT TO GIVE TO THE USER AND WHAT TO GIVE TO THE COMPUTER TO DO•CHOOSING PROBLEM SOLVING AIDS•NOT UNITARY, NOT ONE AID FOR EACH SITUATION•BOTH TASK AND USER EXPERIENCE INVOLVED
![Page 122: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/122.jpg)
122
PROBLEM SOLVING SUBTASKS
•PROBLEM RECOGNITION•PROBLEM DEFINITION•GOAL DEFINITION•STRATEGY SELECTION•ALTERNATIVE GENERATION•ALTERNATIVE EVALUATION
![Page 123: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/123.jpg)
123
ASPECTS OF A TASK
•1. GOALS AND INTENTIONS•2. SPECIFICATION OF ACTIONS•3. MAPPING FROM GOALS TO ACTIONS•4. TRANSLATION: COGNITIVE TO PHYSICAL•5. PHYSICAL STATE OF THE SYSTEM•6. CONTROL MECHANISMS•7. MAPPING PHYSICAL TO CONTROL•8. INTERPRETATION OF SYSTEM STATE•9. EVALUATING OUTCOMES
![Page 124: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/124.jpg)
124
USER ACTIVITIES
•ESTABLISHING GOAL•FORMING INTENTION•SPECIFYING ACTION SEQUENCE•EXECUTING THE ACTION•PERCEIVING SYSTEM STATE•INTERPRETING THE STATE•EVALUATING RELATIONSHIPS
![Page 125: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/125.jpg)
125
BEHAVIOUR DIMENSIONS
•ABSTRACTION NO ABSTRACTION•SEARCH NO SEARCH•DATA DRIVEN CONCEPTUALLY DRIVEN•ABSTRACTION: DEAL WITH STRATEGY•NO ABSTRACTION: GENERATE ALTERNATIVES•SEARCH: NEW STRATEGIES•NO SEARCH: USING ESTABLISHED STRATEGIES•DATA DRIVEN: EVALUATION BY DATA•CONCEPTUALLY DRIVEN: EVALUATION BY CONCEPT
![Page 126: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/126.jpg)
126
METHODS OF PROBLEM SOLVING I
•ALTERNATIVE EVALUATION: SEARCH, NO ABSTRACTION•ALTERNATIVE GENERATION: SEARCH, NO ABSTRACTION, CONCEPTUALLY DRIVEN•BACKTRACKING: NO ABSTRACTIONS, SEARCH•IMPROVING DATA: DATA DRIVEN•CHANGE PROBLEM REPRESENTATION: ABSTRACTION•CONSISTENCY CHECKING: DATA DRIVEN•STRATEGY IMPROVEMENT: ABSTRACTION, CONCEPTUALLY DRIVEN
![Page 127: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/127.jpg)
127
METHODS OF PROBLEM SOLVING II
•DECOMPOSITION AND RECOMBINATION: ABSTRACTION, CONCEPTUALLY DRIVEN•EXTENDED MEMORY: NO ABSTRACTION, SEARCH, NO SEARCH, DATA DRIVEN, CONCEPTUALLY DRIVEN•RAPID TRIAL AND ERROR: NO ABSTRACTION, SEARCH, DATA DRIVEN•STRATEGY CAPTURE (RULE SYSTEMS): DATA DRIVEN
![Page 128: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/128.jpg)
128
DIALOGUE PROPERTIES
•INITIATIVE: COMPUTER OR USER INITIATIVE•FLEXIBILITY: NUMBER OF WAYS A USER CAN ACCOMPLISH A GIVEN TASK•POWER: AMOUNT OF WORK DONE BY THE SYSTEM IN RESPONSE TO A SINGLE USER ACTION•INFORMATION LOAD: DEGREE TO WHICH THE INTERACTION ABSORBS MEMORY AND PROCESSING RESOURCES OF USER
![Page 129: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/129.jpg)
129
GUIDELINES
•INTERFACE BUGS•OUTRIGHT FAILURE•DOING SOMETHING THE WRONG WAY•NOT ALLOWING SOMETHING TO BE DONE•STRUCTURAL: USER CAN DO X Y BUT NOT Y X
![Page 130: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/130.jpg)
130
DESIGN PRINCIPLES
•MAKE EXPLANATIONS BRIEF•ESSENTIAL PART OF DESIGNING USER INTERFACES IS TO EXPLAIN THEM•A STRUCTURE MODEL IS KEY TO UNDERSTANDING•MENDELEEV'S PERIODIC TABLE AND IMPACT ON CHEMISTRY
![Page 131: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/131.jpg)
131
JOSS DESIGN PRINCIPLES I
•EXECUTION STEPS ARE ALWAYS COMPLETED•INTERRUPT CAUSES NO STATE CHANGE•SINGLE MODE•COMMAND CAUSING AN ERROR HAS NO IMPACT•JOSS AND USER PERCEIVE SAME INTERNAL STATE
![Page 132: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/132.jpg)
132
JOSS DESIGN PRINCIPLES II
•JOSS INSISTED ON LETTER PERFECT INPUT/OUTPUT•USER / COMPUTER CONTROL BY LOCKED KEYBOARD -NEVER ANY DOUBT•ANYTHING INPUTTED COULD BE STORED•INCREMENTAL AND BATCH THE SAME
![Page 133: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/133.jpg)
133
![Page 134: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/134.jpg)
134
USER MENTAL MODELS
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 135: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/135.jpg)
135
USER MENTAL MODELS
•USER MODEL IS RARELY VERBALIZED•A USER MODEL IS GENERALLY AS SIMPLE AS POSSIBLE•THE USER MODEL OFTEN CHANGES AS HE OR SHE ACQUIRES MORE KNOWLEDGE ABOUT THE SYSTEM•USER MODELS SHOULD CONFORM TO PSYCHOLOGICAL REQUIREMENTS
![Page 136: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/136.jpg)
136
TASK MODEL OF WRITING IEXPLORE
•I. EXPLORE•GATHER RAW MATERIALS•EXPLORE (BROWSE) MATERIALS•PLAY WITH DIFFERENT CLUSTERS OF IDEAS AND•RELATIONSHIPS•LET IDEAS HAPPEN•MECHANICS•JOT AND POSTING, OUTLINE, DIAGRAMS, FILL IN HOLES, BOTTOM UP, TOP DOWN
•OBJECTIVE: MAP CONCEPTUAL SPACE
![Page 137: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/137.jpg)
137
WRITING IIANALYSES 1
•II. ANALYZE READERS•IDENTIFY READERSHIP•RANK THEM•ESTIMATE WHAT THEY KNOW ABOUT SUBJECT•DETERMINE WHAT YOU HAVE TO TELL THEM•SET GOALS ON HOW MUCH YOU WANT TO CHANGE THEM
![Page 138: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/138.jpg)
138
WRITING IIIANALYSES 2
•CHANGE KNOWLEDGE, CHANGE ATTITUDE•METHODS•ESTIMATE DISTANCE FROM YOU•MATRIX OF CONCEPTS BY READER TYPES
![Page 139: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/139.jpg)
139
WRITING IVFOCUS 1
•III. FOCUS•DECIDE ON THE DOCUMENT YOU WILL WRITE OUT OF ALL POSSIBLE•WHAT IS OVER RIDING POINT•MOST IMPORTANT READERS•CHANGE TO MAKE IN READERS•HOW TO SOUND (IMAGE)
![Page 140: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/140.jpg)
140
WRITING VFOCUS 2
•ORGANIZE TOP-DOWN HIERARCHICAL STRUCTURE•HEADINGS ARE CUES TO READER ON CONCEPTS
•BOTTOM LEVEL:•PARAGRAPH FOR WHAT YOU DO NOT KNOW WELL•PAGE OR MORE FOR MATERIAL YOU KNOW WELL
![Page 141: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/141.jpg)
141
WRITING VIWRITING 1
•IV. WRITE•PRODUCE USABLE DRAFT FOR LATER REVISION•DO NOT REVISE AS YOU GO•ALTERNATIVE WAYS•START TO FINISH•TOP-DOWN: INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY•RANDOM ORDER•BOTTOM UP: DETAILS FOR EACH SECTION
![Page 142: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/142.jpg)
142
WRITING VIIWRITING 2
•PROBLEMS IN WRITING•WITH WORDING•MARK FOR LATER•3 STRIKES YOUR OUT,•KEEP WRITING
•WITH STRUCTURE•MINOR - KEEP WRITING•MAJOR - RETHINK STRUCTURE
•THINK STRATEGICALLY: TO PERSUADE, TO INFORM, SIGNAL HIERARCHY
![Page 143: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/143.jpg)
143
WRITING VIIIFINAL STAGES
•V. VERIFY AND REVISE•GOAL: TO TURN DRAFT INTO FINISHED PRODUCT•SET PRIORITY AND EFFORT•SYNTACTIC: GRAMMAR, WORD CHOICE, SPELLING•SEMANTIC: OBJECTIVES, STRUCTURE, PARAGRAPHS
•VI. REVIEW•VII. FORMAT•VIII. COLLABORATIVE DOCUMENT
![Page 144: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/144.jpg)
144
WRITING IXSTRUCTURE
•RELATION WRITERS READERS
•NETWORK EXPLORING REMEMBERING•HIERARCHY ORGANIZING COMPREHENDING•SEQUENCE ENCODING DECODING
•DOCUMENT SHOULD SIGNAL STRUCTURE: HEADINGS•PARAGRAPH IS A SINGLE THOUGHT•HYPERTEXT AN APPROACH TO NETWORKS LEVEL
![Page 145: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/145.jpg)
145
WRITING AND READING X
•HIGHLIGHT WHAT THEY WANT: IMPOSE VALUE•ANNOTATE, MARGINAL NOTES•FLIP PAGES BACK AND FORTH•SEEK REFERENCES, INDEX, GLOSSARY, TEXT TO FIGURE, EARLIER ITEMS•MARKING TRIALS•BOOKMARKS FOR INTERRUPTIONS•COPYING NOTES•AGENDA FOR FURTHER WORK
![Page 146: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/146.jpg)
146
MENTAL MODELGUIDELINES 1
•FORM DATA CHUNKS THAT ARE USED THROUGHOUT THE APPLICATION•VERBAL MEDIATION: WITHIN SYSTEM IMPORTANT WORDS SHOULD TAKE ON SPECIALIZED MEANINGS•MODEL PROCESSES IN THE INTERFACE TO THE LEVEL OF DETAIL WHICH THE USER CAN AFFECT, BUT NO MORE
![Page 147: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/147.jpg)
147
MENTAL MODELGUIDELINES 2
•PROCESSES SHOULD BE GROUP TOGETHER TO HIGHER LEVEL: E.G., ALL UPDATING TASKS•LOWER LEVEL PROCESSES SHOULD BE THE SAME WHERE EVER THEY ARE (SEARCH).
![Page 148: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/148.jpg)
148
MENTAL MODELS IINTERACTING OBJECTS &
EVENTS•CASUAL COMMONSENSE•TEXT OBJECT AND MEMBER OBJECT•CHAIN OF EVENTS•SET OF SYSTEM STATES•MORE AMBIGUOUS AND FUZZY•WORK ON OBJECTS•USERS SELECT OBJECT FIRST•AUTOMATIC PROCESSING•PARALLEL PROCESSING•EVENT DRIVEN
![Page 149: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/149.jpg)
149
MENTAL MODELS IIVARIABLES AND RULES
•DETERMINISTIC REASONING•MEASURE BY OBSERVED VARIABLES•MEASURED BY RULES BETWEEN VARIABLES•WORK ON ACTIONS•COMMANDS CHOSEN FIRST•CONSCIOUS PROCESSING•SERIAL PROCESSING
![Page 150: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/150.jpg)
150
MENTAL MODELS III
•USERS WANT TO SUBDIVIDE AND CLASSIFY (ENCODE) SYSTEM•LOW LEVEL OF SYSTEM TO DEAL WITH EVENT DRIVEN PROCESSES (REACTIVE)•HIGHER LEVEL DRIVEN BY GOALS AND MOTIVES (STRATEGIC)
![Page 151: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/151.jpg)
151
MENTAL MODELS IV
•PROBLEM IS POSSIBLE LATERAL PROCESSING BETWEEN BOTTOM LEVEL NODES•BOTTOM LEVEL•DATA DOMAIN FOR ASSOCIATION, RECOGNITION, AND MATCHING•FUNCTIONAL DOMAIN FOR ABDUCTION, DEDUCTION, AND INDUCTION
![Page 152: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/152.jpg)
152
MENTAL MODELS V
•IF SYSTEM STATE IS NOT OBVIOUS USERS WILL ENCODE IT THEIR OWN WAY•PEOPLE DO NOT MIND DEALING WITH COMPLEXITY IF THEY CAN CONTROL IT•BOTH DATA DRIVEN AND HYPOTHESIS DRIVEN MODES SHOULD BE CATERED TO
![Page 153: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/153.jpg)
153
MENTAL MODELS VI
•USERS SHOULD UNDERSTAND ANY INFERENCE PROCESS•STRUCTURE OF GROUPED DATA SHOULD BE EVIDENT•DATA MANIPULATION SHOULD EXHIBIT RESULTS RATHER THAN INFORM IT IS DONE•ONLY ONE EXIT AND ONE ENTRY TO A PROCESS SHOULD BE USED
![Page 154: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/154.jpg)
154
MENTAL MODELS VII
•T(TASK) = T(ACQUIRE) + T(EXECUTE)•ACQUISITION IS MAIN PROBLEM IN REDUCTION OF TIME•USE USERS COGNITIVE MODEL•MATCHING MECHANISMS:•SYNTACTIC (GRAMMAR)•PARAMETRIC (FORM, COLOR, SHAPE)•SEMANTIC (TEXT)•ICONIC (VISUAL PATTERN)
![Page 155: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/155.jpg)
155
MENTAL MODELS VIII
•TASK KNOWING: GOAL AND SUBTASKS TO BE ACCOMPLISHED•INTERFACE KNOWING: MECHANICS OF ACCOMPLISHING TASK•SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE KNOWING: HOW SYSTEM WORKS•DESCRIPTIVE REPRESENTATIONS: WHAT USER CURRENTLY KNOWS•PRESCRIPTIVE REPRESENTATIONS: WHAT USER SHOULD KNOW
![Page 156: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/156.jpg)
156
MENTAL MODELS IXGOMS
•GOMS: GOALS, OPERATORS, METHODS, AND SELECTION RULES•GOALS, SUBGOALS•RULES TO CHOOSE METHODS•SEQUENCE OF OPERATORS TO DO A METHOD
![Page 157: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/157.jpg)
157
MENTAL MODELS XGOMS
•EXAMPLE: SEVERAL WAYS TO FIND FIRST PLACE TO EDIT:•SEARCH, PAGE SCANNING, CURSOR KEYS
•MODELS OF PROCESSING TIME BASED UPON KEYSTROKING VERY ACCURATE•MENTAL MODELS: IF I DO THIS, THIS WILL HAPPEN
![Page 158: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/158.jpg)
158
MENTAL MODELS XIMODEL TYPES 1
•SURROGATES: PERFECTLY MIMICS TARGETS, NO CORRESPONDENCE (SPREADSHEETS)•METAPHORS: DIRECT COMPARISON BETWEEN TARGET SYSTEM AND SOMETHING KNOWN TO USER (DESKTOP)•GLASS BOX: ATTEMPTS TO REPRESENT INTERNAL SUBSYSTEMS (STORAGE FILE CABINETS)
![Page 159: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/159.jpg)
159
MENTAL MODELS XIIMODEL TYPES 2
•NETWORK: SYSTEM STATES, USER STATES, AND TRANSITION CONDITIONS•PROBLEM: A FLOW CHART IS LIKE A PIPELINE (GAS/WATER/USER KNOWLEDGE)
![Page 160: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/160.jpg)
160
MENTAL MODELS XIIIINFERENCES
•GOMS (SEQUENCE/METHOD) APPROACHES CAN PREDICT EFFORT BUT NOT ERRORS. CAN PREDICT USE OF KNOWLEDGE•MENTAL MODELS EXPLAIN ERRORS AND BEHAVIOUR IN NOVEL SITUATIONS•LEARNING INVOLVES: INTERNALIZATION, ELABORATION, AND CONSTRUCTION•EXPLANATIONS OF CALCULATORS VARY WIDELY EVEN BY PEOPLE WHO USE THEM.
![Page 161: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/161.jpg)
161
MENTAL MODELS XIVINFERENCES
•UNIX: 20 OF 400 COMMANDS ACCOUNT FOR 70% OF USAGE (LOCAL TASK VIEWS)•EXTENSIVE USAGE DOES NOT LEAD TO POWER USE OF SYSTEM (WITHOUT METAPHOR?)
![Page 162: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/162.jpg)
162
MENTAL MODELS XVLEARNING
•IF DESIGN IS BASED UPON A MODEL THEN USER CAN BE TRAINED BY TEACHING THE MODEL•TEACHING A CALCULATOR BY EXPLAINING INTERNAL MODEL•SAME ON STANDARD TASKS•BETTER FOR NOVEL TASKS
•SOME INDICATION BETTER LEARNING IF METAPHOR FORCES ACTIVE LEARNING•READING UNDERSTOOD BETTER IF GOALS PRIOR TO DETAILS IN STORIES
![Page 163: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/163.jpg)
163
MENTAL MODELS XVIMETAPHOR EXAMPLES 1
•TYPEWRITER (WORDPROCESSING)•DOCUMENT (GML, PAGEMAKER)•OUTLINE (THINKTANK)•CHALKBOARD•NOTECARDS (HYPERTEXT)•DESKTOP (STAR, LISA, ETC.)•DESKTOP TOOLS (SIDEKICK)•DASHBOARD•BUSINESS FORMS
![Page 164: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/164.jpg)
164
MENTAL MODELS XVIIMETAPHOR EXAMPLES 2
•TABLES OF DATA•SPREADSHEETS•BUILDINGS•THEATRE•ROADMAP•LETTERS•POST OFFICE•SPACES•TOOLS
![Page 165: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/165.jpg)
165
MENTAL MODELS XVIIIPROBLEMS 1
•METAPHORS OFTEN INCOMPLETE ANALOGY•MISMATCHES PROVIDE PROBLEMS (DESTRUCTIVE BACKSPACE)•PAPER FORM ON SCREEN MAY RESTRICT INPUT TO FIELDS, NO MARKING•HOWEVER, CAN VERIFY DATA
![Page 166: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/166.jpg)
166
MENTAL MODELS XIXPROBLEMS 2
•METAPHORS OFTEN APPLIED UNEVENLY•METAPHORS CAN BE MORE THAN PHYSICAL WORLD (GAMES)•METAPHORS CAN BE MISLEADING•STRUCTURE OF ATOM = STRUCTURE OF SOLAR SYSTEM
![Page 167: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/167.jpg)
167
MENTAL MODELS XXCOGNITIVE STATES
•COGNITIVE STATES OF METAPHOR USE•INSTANTIATION: AUTOMATIC ACTIVATION PROCESS, USUALLY BASED UPON SIMILARITY•MISMATCHES STIR ELABORATION
•ELABORATION: MAPPING STRUCTURE BY GOAL MATCHING AND CHECKING INFERENCES•CONFIRMATION OF INFERENCES LEAD TO CONSOLIDATION
•CONSOLIDATION: CREATION OF MODEL, CONDENSING INTO SINGLE REPRESENTATION
![Page 168: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/168.jpg)
168
MENTAL MODELS XXIPROPERTIES
•PROPERTIES OF METAPHORS•BASE SPECIFICITY: DEGREE TO WHICH IT SPECIFIES THE TARGET•CLARITY: DEGREE OF ONE TO ONE CORRESPONDENCE•ABSTRACTION: DEGREE OF GENERALITY•RICHNESS: EXPANDABILITY•BASE EXHAUSTIVENESS: COVERS WHOLE OF TARGET
![Page 169: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/169.jpg)
169
MENTAL MODELS XXIIDESIGNING METAPHORS
•IDENTIFY CANDIDATE METAPHORS•DETAIL METAPHOR / SOFTWARE MATCH•USE REPRESENTATIVE USER SCENARIOS•IDENTIFY MISMATCHES•IDENTIFY DESIGN STRATEGIES TO HELP USERS•MANAGE MISMATCHES•TO DESCRIBE METAPHOR:•TASKS: WHAT PEOPLE DO•METHODS: OBJECTS, ACTIONS•APPEARANCE: LOOK AND FEEL
![Page 170: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/170.jpg)
170
MENTAL MODELS XXIIIEXAMPLE 1
•SCENARIO:•METAPHOR: REMOVE DOCUMENT FROM A FOLDER TO VIEW•TARGET: REMOVE FILE FROM A FILE DIRECTORY TO VIEW
•METHODS:•METAPHOR: OPEN FOLDER BY PULLING BACK FOLDER COVER•TARGET: OPEN FOLDER BY DOUBLE CLICKING FOLDER ICON
![Page 171: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/171.jpg)
171
MENTAL MODELS XXIVEXAMPLE 2
•APPEARANCE:•METAPHOR: 3-D PAPER FOLDER THAT UNFOLDS•TARGET: 2-D ICON THAT EXPANDS INTO 2-D WINDOW
![Page 172: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/172.jpg)
172
MENTAL MODELS XXVLEARNING MODEL 1
•COGNITIVE APPRENTICESHIP THEORY•I. BEGIN WITH TASK EMBEDDED IN FAMILIAR ACTIVITY (BY EXAMPLE)•PROVIDES SCAFFOLDING FOR UNFAMILIAR TASK
•II. POINT TO DIFFERENT DECOMPOSITIONS•STRESSES HEURISTICS ARE NOT ABSOLUTE
![Page 173: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/173.jpg)
173
MENTAL MODELS XXVILEARNING MODEL 2
•III. ALLOW LEARNER TO GENERATE THEIR OWN PATHS•ENCULTURATING/SITUATED COGNITION
![Page 174: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/174.jpg)
174
MENTAL MODEL XXVIIDOCUMENTATION
•MINIMAL MANUAL•FOCUS ON REAL TASKS NOT OVERVIEWS•DON'T EXPLAIN MENU BUT SHOW HOW TO CREATE A MESSAGE•EXPLAIN PRINCIPLE ERRORS USERS MAKE AS DETERMINED BY PROTOCOL ANALYSIS•COORDINATE WRITING WITH THE USE OF THE SCREENS•"CAN YOU FIND THIS PROMPT ON THE SCREEN?"
![Page 175: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/175.jpg)
175
MENTAL MODELS XXVIIICOGNITIVE 1
•DIFFICULT CONSTRUCTING COMMANDS THAT ARE "NATURAL"•NATURAL IMPLIES EXISTENCE OF GOAL-ACTION ASSOCIATION•COMMAND HIERARCHY IS ONE APPROACH•GET.LIST•GET.SCAN•GET.VIEW
![Page 176: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/176.jpg)
176
MENTAL MODELS XXIXCOGNITIVE 2
•NUMBER OF RULES TO DECOMPOSE A GOAL INTO SUBGOALS AND TO EXECUTE THE SEQUENCE OF ACTIONS PREDICTS LEARNING TIME•LEARNING PROGRAM LANGUAGE = 200-500 HOURS•NUMBER OF THOUGHTS TO CONSTRUCT NEXT ACTION PREDICTS DELAY•AMOUNT NEEDED IN SHORT TERM MEMORY PREDICTS ERRORS
![Page 177: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/177.jpg)
177
MENTAL MODELS XXXCOGNITIVE 3
•VISUAL LAYOUT FOUND TO BE VERY IMPORTANT AND NOT PREDICTED BY GRAMMAR RULES•REDUCE NUMBER OF RULES NEED IS AN OBJECTIVE•DELETING SENTENCE SAME RULE AS DELETING PARAGRAPH
•TRAINING WHEELS: INTRODUCE ONLY SUBSET OF SYSTEM
![Page 178: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/178.jpg)
178
MENTAL MODELS XXXICOGNITIVE 4
•METAPHORS SHOULD NOT BE MECHANISTIC•WHETHER OR NOT SYSTEM USES METAPHOR IN THE DESIGN THE USER WILL FORMULATE ONE•MAIL METAPHOR AN EXAMPLE OF LIMITING THE UNDERSTANDING OF WHAT IS POSSIBLE
![Page 179: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/179.jpg)
179
MENTAL MODELS XXXIIOBSERVATION
•"METAPHORS ARE NOT JUST GOOD OR BAD DESCRIPTIONS OF THEIR TARGETS, RATHER THEY ARE STIMULATING OR UNSTIMULATING INVITATIONS TO SEE TARGET DOMAIN IN A NEW LIGHT." CARROL
![Page 180: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/180.jpg)
180
![Page 181: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/181.jpg)
181
COGNITIVE PROPERTIES
•© copyright 1991 Murray Turoff
![Page 182: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/182.jpg)
182
THE MAGIC NUMBER 7+-2
•MILLER (1956)•CHUNKING•1776149219181941
•LIMITED CHANNEL CAPACITY•SHORT TERM MEMORY•INFORMATION THEORY•LEARNING STRATEGIES•PEOPLE REORGANIZE INFORMATION TO OVERCOME LIMITATIONS
![Page 183: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/183.jpg)
183
THE MAGIC NUMBER 7+-2
•EXAMPLES•THE SEVEN SEAS•THE SEVEN WONDERS OF THE WORLD•THE SEVEN SINS
![Page 184: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/184.jpg)
184
RECIPROCAL RELATIONSHIP
•COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY•INFORMATION PROCESSING•MEMORY MODELS•LEARNING THEORIES•LANGUAGE PROCESSING•IMAGE PROCESSING•ORGANIZATION AND CLUSTERING•LEVELS OF MEMORY
![Page 185: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/185.jpg)
185
HUMAN FACTORS AND ENGINEERING
•STIMULUS RESPONSE MODELS•PERCEPTION PROCESSING•SIGNAL/NOISE RELATIONSHIPS•PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES•SIGNAL DETECTION THEORY•CHOICE REACTION TIME•DECISION PERFORMANCE•STRESS REACTIONS•FILTERING
•MAN-MACHINE SYSTEMS
![Page 186: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/186.jpg)
186
COMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION THEORY
•COMMUNICATION CHANNELS•CAPACITY•CODING
•SERIAL AND PARALLEL PROCESSING•UNCERTAINTY AND AMBIGUITY•SUBJECTIVE INFORMATION MEASURES
![Page 187: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/187.jpg)
187
MORSE CODE CODING
• LETTER CODE PROBABILITY
• E * .131• T - .105• A *- .082• X *-** .0012• Z **** .0008
![Page 188: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/188.jpg)
188
THE THIRD METAPHORCOMPUTER ANALOGY TO
THINKING•GENERALITY OF PURPOSE•ALGORITHMS, SUBROUTINES AND COMPILERS•CONDITIONAL INSTRUCTIONS AND DECISION MAKING•SIMULATION•STRUCTURAL THEORY•SYMBOL MANIPULATION•LEVELS OF ABSTRACTION•PROGRAMS AND INTERNAL STORAGE•THEORIES OF LANGUAGE AND KNOWLEDGE
![Page 189: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/189.jpg)
189
AN INFORMATION PROCESSING SYSTEM
•ENVIRONMENT•RECEPTORS, EFFECTORS, PROCESSOR, MEMORY
•SYMBOLS•STRUCTURE•SET OF RELATIONSHIPS•REFERENCES OBJECT•PROGRAM OR INTERPRETER
•MEMORY•RETAINS SYMBOL STRUCTURES•REPRESENTATION
![Page 190: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/190.jpg)
190
SYSTEM CONCEPTS
•INFORMATION FLOW•DECOUPLING•HIERARCHICAL STRUCTURE•NETWORKING STRUCTURE•ASSOCIATIVE STRUCTURE
![Page 191: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/191.jpg)
191
CHOICE REACTION TIME (CRT)SERIAL PROCESSING MODE
•STIMULUS PREPROCESSED•STIMULUS COMPARED UNTIL CATEGORIZED•CATEGORISATION IS BASIS FOR RESPONSE SELECTION•SUBJECT PROGRAMS HIS RESPONSE EXECUTION•PROPORTIONAL TO LOG OF CHOICES•CONSISTENT WITH INFORMATION THEORY•40 MSEC PER ITEM, 400 MSEC INITIAL SETUP
![Page 192: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/192.jpg)
192
SERIAL AND PARALLEL PROCESSING
•CRT SERIAL•TYPING AND PHONE NUMBERS PARALLEL•SCANNING FOR:•(K, Z), OR (K, O), OR (O, C)•K OR (K,Z) SAME TIME•(K, O) DOUBLE TIME
•PREPROCESSORS FOR SENSES•PEOPLE SCANNING NEWSPAPERS•SPEED INDEPENDENT OF NUMBER OF CLIENTS
![Page 193: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/193.jpg)
193
SPEED-ACCURACY TRADE-OFF
•EXTREME ACCURACY EMPHASIS•SLOW, MAXIMUM ACCURACY
•EXTREME SPEED EMPHASIS•FAST, VERY LOW ACCURACY
•HUMANS CAN CHOOSE TRADEOFF POINT•SIGNAL DETECTION THEORY
![Page 194: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/194.jpg)
194
SIGNAL DETECTION THEORY I
•HUMAN SETS:•UPPER THRESHOLD•FAST POSITIVE RESPONSE•SMALL NUMBER OF FALSE ALARMS
•LOWER THRESHOLD•FAST NEGATIVE RESPONSE•SMALL NUMBER OF MISSES
![Page 195: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/195.jpg)
195
SIGNAL DETECTION THEORY II
•BETWEEN THRESHOLDS•MEMORY SEARCH YIELDING•SLOWER POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE RESPONSES
•FAMILIARITY IS THE X AXIS•LEARNING EFFECTS
![Page 196: Design Of Interactive Systems](https://reader033.fdocuments.in/reader033/viewer/2022061114/54594f6daf795998788b576f/html5/thumbnails/196.jpg)
196
RECOGNITION DECISION FLOW
•STIMULUS PRESENTED•ENCODING AND ACCESS TO•FAMILIARITY VALUE•RESPOND IMMEDIATELY•NO: EXHAUSTIVE SEARCH
•YES: ACTIVATE RESPONSE•RESPONSE OUTPUT•HUMAN PERFORMANCE CAN BE INFLUENCED