Publication | Closed Access
Observing users, designing clarity: A case study on the user‐centered design of a cross‐language information retrieval system
63
Citations
31
References
2004
Year
EngineeringIntelligent Information RetrievalInteractive SearchCorpus LinguisticsText MiningNatural Language ProcessingInformation RetrievalComputational LinguisticsQuery ExpansionLanguage StudiesForeign LanguagesKnowledge RetrievalUser ExperienceCross-language RetrievalInformation ManagementNative Language QueriesCase StudyUser‐centered DesignHuman-computer InteractionLinguisticsInteractive Information Retrieval
Abstract This report presents a case study of the development of an interface for a novel and complex form of document retrieval: searching for texts written in foreign languages based on native language queries. Although the underlying technology for achieving such a search is relatively well understood, the appropriate interface design is not. A study involving users from the beginning of the design process is described, and it covers initial examination of user needs and tasks, preliminary design and testing of interface components, building, testing, and refining the interface, and, finally, conducting usability tests of the system. Lessons are learned at every stage of the process, leading to a much more informed view of how such an interface should be built.
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