1 / 15

Summary of Task Analysis, social aspects, alternative approaches

Summary of Task Analysis, social aspects, alternative approaches. IST 331 - Olivier Georgeon April 27 th 2010. Agenda of the presentation. Task Analysis Data gathering Formal task description Social aspects of users Alternative approaches Non goal-driven Co-evolution. Task Analysis.

Télécharger la présentation

Summary of Task Analysis, social aspects, alternative approaches

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Summary of Task Analysis, social aspects,alternative approaches IST 331 - Olivier Georgeon April 27th 2010

  2. Agenda of the presentation • Task Analysis • Data gathering • Formal task description • Social aspects of users • Alternative approaches • Non goal-driven • Co-evolution

  3. Task Analysis

  4. Task Analysis : Data Gathering • Lots of task analysis methods • None completely satisfactory • Best solution is to employ a variety of methods • Questionnaires and Interviews • Observational studies • Examination of competing, or similar products • Literature review • Unstructured user input. Spontaneous feedback

  5. Task Analysis:Formal task description • KLM • V. easy to use, fast, simple, clear, timing, can be tightened • For expert behavior only, can’t do dual tasks, learning • Hierarchical Task Analysis • Easy to use, fast, simple, clear • For expert behavior, dual tasks not represented, no learning, cannot be tightened, no timing • GOMS • Easy to use, fast, simple, less clear • For expert behavior only. Can’t do dual tasks easily. Require precise goals.

  6. GOMS Goal 1 (or Task) Method 1 Method 2 Goal 2 Selection rule 1 Method 3 Goal 3 Op 1 Op 4 … Op 2 Op 5 Goal 2 Goal 4 Op 3 Op 6 Time

  7. Social aspects

  8. From sociological studies • Diffusion of Social Responsibility • Complementarities between individuals • Social loafing • Majority/minority effect • Risk taking effect • Cognitive dissonance • Who you are / Who you want to be / who you want people think you are.

  9. Prisoner Dilemma • Interactions can be summarised with payoff matrix • People prefer high payoffs • Good systems create payoffs to encourage the behavior they want • There are ways to encourage good behavior • Make players public • Make their history public • Make payoff matrix public • Payoff what you want to encourage

  10. Social Media Principles • Who you are • Personalization. Home page. • Who you knows • Browse network • What you do • Provide activity stream

  11. Alternative approaches

  12. Not always goal driven • Users are free and do not fit a pre-defined model • Users follow feeling and emotions • User behavior evolve overt time • New usages emerge • New area for human behavior research

  13. Evolutionist process Design Use

  14. Post-hoc Evaluation • When you can’t do gold standard of users and their tasks • Might not know: users, tasks, context, task frequency, how things fit together, etc. • When you are driven by new technology • There are tools for detailed activity analysis • Human behavior analysis is still an active area of research.

  15. Conclusion • Know your user's task • Data gathering • Formal task description • Social aspects • Know your user's social context and motivations • Alternative approaches • Non goal-driven • Co-evolution

More Related