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On the contributions of different empirical data in usability testing
54
Citations
15
References
2000
Year
Unknown Venue
Usability ProblemEngineeringTask AnalysisOn-line TestingCommunicationUsability TestingUsability StudyUser-centric EvaluationLanguage TestingLanguage StudiesTestabilityContent AnalysisStatisticsReliabilityUsability EngineeringDesignUser ExperienceUser EvaluationUser AnalysisSoftware TestingHuman-computer InteractionEmpirical EvidenceLinguisticsSurvey Methodology
Many sources of empirical data can be used to evaluate an interface (e.g., time to learn, time to perform benchmark tasks, number of errors on benchmark tasks, answers on questionnaires, comments made in verbal protocols). This paper examines the relative contributions of both quanti?ta?tive and qualitative data gathered during a usability study. For each usability problem uncovered by this study, we trace each contributing piece of evidence back to its empirical source. For this usability study, the verbal protocol provided the sole source of evidence for more than one third of the most severe problems and more than two thirds of the less severe problems. Thus, although the verbal protocol provided the bulk of the evidence, other sources of data contributed disproportionately to the more critical problems. This work suggests that further research is required to determine the relative value of different forms of empirical evidence.
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