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Testing and Modeling Users

Testing and Modeling Users. Kristina Winbladh & Ramzi Nasr. Usability. Usability means that the people who use the product can do so quickly and easily to accomplish their own tasks We want to build usable products How do we know whether our product is usable? Testing. Usability Testing.

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Testing and Modeling Users

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  1. Testing and Modeling Users Kristina Winbladh & Ramzi Nasr

  2. Usability • Usability means that the people who use the product can do so quickly and easily to accomplish their own tasks • We want to build usable products • How do we know whether our product is usable? • Testing

  3. Usability Testing • Planning a usability test • Defining goals and concerns • Choosing participants • Design • Predictive Models

  4. Planning a Usability Test • How long does usability testing take? • Important for clients and managers to know • Development does not have to stop • Time factors • Complexity of the product? • How much of the product is to be tested? • Number of participants? • Test preparation? • Test evaluation/report?

  5. Examples • Microsoft • 8-12 weeks • Testers work together with developers • Formal reports • General Electric Information Services • 4-6 weeks • 3 days to determine participants and tasks • Week 1&2 test: scenario & questionnaire design • End of week 2: pilot test • Week 3&4: conducting the test w 12 participants • Week 5: test data analysis • Week 6: finished the report

  6. Can you do it faster? • 1 Week • In-house usability specialists conduct test • Each test covers only a few features • Participants background is already known • Tasks are short • Generate short report • 1.5 days… • Special case

  7. What can you do to make testing successful? • Planning! • Starting testing w/o thinking about: • What aspects might not be as usable as they should be? • How well do the participants represent the actual users? • What tasks will we ask them to do in the short time they have? • What information are we going to collect? • How are we going to analyze the information? • What are we going to do with the analyzed information?

  8. The steps • Define the goals and concerns that are driving the test • Decide who should be participants • Recruit participants • Select and organize tasks to test • Create task scenarios • Decide how to measure usability • Prepare other materials • Prepare testing environment • Prepare test team • Conduct pilot test

  9. Team Work • Usability specialists • Designers and developers • Technical communicators • Trainers • Marketing • Helpdesk or customer assistance

  10. Usability Testing • Planning a usability test • Defining goals and concerns • Choosing participants • Design • Predictive Models

  11. Defining Goals and Concerns • You cannot do exhaustive testing • Make choices among goals and concerns • Move from general concerns to specific ones • Understand sources of goals and concerns

  12. Making Choices Among Goals and Concerns • Clearly define the concern that the study will answer • Prioritize all the concerns

  13. Moving From General Concerns to Specific Ones • Refinement • Example • General: how easy is it to use the system? • Specific: how long does this specific task take?

  14. Understanding Source of Goals and Concerns • Sources: • Task analysis and quantitative usability goals • Timely issues • A heuristic analysis • Previous tests of this or other products

  15. Usability Testing • Planning a usability test • Defining goals and concerns • Choosing participants • Design • Predictive Models

  16. Choosing Participants • Steps for choosing participants: • Developing user profiles • Selecting subgroups for a test • Defining and quantifying characteristics for each subgroup • Deciding how many people to include in a test

  17. Developing User Profiles • Collaborative work with: • Marketing, usability specialists, product designers • Use • Surveys, focus groups sessions, contextual interviews, current users of previous version • Characteristics: • Those that all users will share • Those that might make a difference among the users

  18. Profile factors • Work experience • General computer experience • Specific computer experience • Experience with this product • Experience with similar products

  19. Selecting Subgroups for a Test • Dividing users into subgroups • Adding more characteristics • Selecting the most critical characteristics • Gathering other information

  20. Defining and Quantifying Characteristics of Each Subgroup • “Intermediate” users • Setting a minimum and a maximum for a subgroup • Selecting a range of participants within each subgroup

  21. Deciding How Many People to Include in a Test • Less than half of usability problems found with 3 participants (Nielson and Molich, 1990) • 80% of usability problems detected with 4-5 participants (Virzi, 1992) • 90% of usability problems detected with 10 participants (Virzi, 1992)

  22. Deciding How Many People to Include in a Test (Cont.) • The number of participants to include in a test depends on: • Number of subgroups needed • Budget and time • Importance of computing statistical significance of results

  23. Usability Testing • Planning a usability test • Defining goals and concerns • Choosing participants • Design • Predictive Models

  24. Design • Techniques • Video, interaction logging, questionnaire, interviews • Tasks • Time to complete • Number/Type of errors per task/unit time • Number of help requests • Number of users per error/success • Testing conditions

  25. Design (Cont.) • Variables and Conditions • Allocation of participants • Different participants • Same participants • Matched pairs of participants • Data collection and analysis

  26. Usability Testing • Planning a usability test • Defining goals and concerns • Choosing participants • Design • Predictive Models

  27. Predictive Models • Measure user performance without testing the users • GOMS (Goal, Operators, Methods, Selection rules) • The Keystroke Level Model

  28. Balance Time, Money, and Information Gain

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