Tracing Impact in a Usability Improvement Process

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Tracing Impact in a Usability Improvement Process. / Uldall-Espersen, Tobias; Frøkjær, Erik; Hornbæk, Kasper Anders Søren.

I: Interacting with Computers, Bind 20, Nr. 1, 2008, s. 48-63.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Uldall-Espersen, T, Frøkjær, E & Hornbæk, KAS 2008, 'Tracing Impact in a Usability Improvement Process', Interacting with Computers, bind 20, nr. 1, s. 48-63.

APA

Uldall-Espersen, T., Frøkjær, E., & Hornbæk, K. A. S. (2008). Tracing Impact in a Usability Improvement Process. Interacting with Computers, 20(1), 48-63.

Vancouver

Uldall-Espersen T, Frøkjær E, Hornbæk KAS. Tracing Impact in a Usability Improvement Process. Interacting with Computers. 2008;20(1):48-63.

Author

Uldall-Espersen, Tobias ; Frøkjær, Erik ; Hornbæk, Kasper Anders Søren. / Tracing Impact in a Usability Improvement Process. I: Interacting with Computers. 2008 ; Bind 20, Nr. 1. s. 48-63.

Bibtex

@article{37096a1075b011dcbee902004c4f4f50,
title = "Tracing Impact in a Usability Improvement Process",
abstract = "Analyzing usability improvement processes as they take place in real-life organizations is necessary to understand the practice of usability work. This paper describes a case study where the usability of an information system is improved and a relationship between the improvements and the evaluation efforts is established. Results show that evaluation techniques complemented each other by suggesting different kinds of usability improvement. Among the techniques applied, a combination of questionnaires and Metaphors of Human Thinking (MOT) showed the largest mean impact and MOT produced the largest number of impacts. Logging of real-life use of the system over 6 months indicated six aspects of improved usability, where significant differences among evaluation techniques were found. Concerning five of the six aspects Think Aloud evaluations and the above-mentioned combination of questionnaire and MOT performed equally well, and better than MOT. Based on the evaluations 40 redesign proposals were developed and 30 of these were implemented. Four of the implemented redesigns where considered especially important. These evolved with inspiration from multiple evaluations and were informed by stakeholders with different kinds of expertise. Our results suggest that practitioners should not rely on isolated evaluations. Instead complementing techniques should be combined, and people with different expertise should be involved.",
author = "Tobias Uldall-Espersen and Erik Fr{\o}kj{\ae}r and Hornb{\ae}k, {Kasper Anders S{\o}ren}",
note = "Paper id:: doi:10.1016/j.intcom.2007.08.001",
year = "2008",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "48--63",
journal = "Interacting with Computers",
issn = "0953-5438",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tracing Impact in a Usability Improvement Process

AU - Uldall-Espersen, Tobias

AU - Frøkjær, Erik

AU - Hornbæk, Kasper Anders Søren

N1 - Paper id:: doi:10.1016/j.intcom.2007.08.001

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - Analyzing usability improvement processes as they take place in real-life organizations is necessary to understand the practice of usability work. This paper describes a case study where the usability of an information system is improved and a relationship between the improvements and the evaluation efforts is established. Results show that evaluation techniques complemented each other by suggesting different kinds of usability improvement. Among the techniques applied, a combination of questionnaires and Metaphors of Human Thinking (MOT) showed the largest mean impact and MOT produced the largest number of impacts. Logging of real-life use of the system over 6 months indicated six aspects of improved usability, where significant differences among evaluation techniques were found. Concerning five of the six aspects Think Aloud evaluations and the above-mentioned combination of questionnaire and MOT performed equally well, and better than MOT. Based on the evaluations 40 redesign proposals were developed and 30 of these were implemented. Four of the implemented redesigns where considered especially important. These evolved with inspiration from multiple evaluations and were informed by stakeholders with different kinds of expertise. Our results suggest that practitioners should not rely on isolated evaluations. Instead complementing techniques should be combined, and people with different expertise should be involved.

AB - Analyzing usability improvement processes as they take place in real-life organizations is necessary to understand the practice of usability work. This paper describes a case study where the usability of an information system is improved and a relationship between the improvements and the evaluation efforts is established. Results show that evaluation techniques complemented each other by suggesting different kinds of usability improvement. Among the techniques applied, a combination of questionnaires and Metaphors of Human Thinking (MOT) showed the largest mean impact and MOT produced the largest number of impacts. Logging of real-life use of the system over 6 months indicated six aspects of improved usability, where significant differences among evaluation techniques were found. Concerning five of the six aspects Think Aloud evaluations and the above-mentioned combination of questionnaire and MOT performed equally well, and better than MOT. Based on the evaluations 40 redesign proposals were developed and 30 of these were implemented. Four of the implemented redesigns where considered especially important. These evolved with inspiration from multiple evaluations and were informed by stakeholders with different kinds of expertise. Our results suggest that practitioners should not rely on isolated evaluations. Instead complementing techniques should be combined, and people with different expertise should be involved.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

SP - 48

EP - 63

JO - Interacting with Computers

JF - Interacting with Computers

SN - 0953-5438

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 1245536