Interaction design beyond human-computer interaction
Machine generated contents note: 1. What is interaction design?1.1 Introduction1.2 Good and poor design1.3 What is interaction design?1.4 The user experience1.5 The process of interaction design1.6 Interaction design and the user experience2. Understanding and conceptualizing interaction2.1 Introduc...
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Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
Chichester
Wiley
2011
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Ausgabe: | 3. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Cover |
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Zusammenfassung: | Machine generated contents note: 1. What is interaction design?1.1 Introduction1.2 Good and poor design1.3 What is interaction design?1.4 The user experience1.5 The process of interaction design1.6 Interaction design and the user experience2. Understanding and conceptualizing interaction2.1 Introduction2.2 Understanding the problem space and conceptualizing design2.3 Conceptual models2.4 Interface metaphors2.5 Interaction types2.6 Paradigms, theories, models, and frameworks3. Cognitive aspects3.1 Introduction3.2 What is cognition?3.3 Cognitive frameworks4. Social interaction4.1 Introduction4.2 Being social4.3 Face-to-face conversations4.4 Remote conversations4.5 Telepresence4.6 Co-presence 4.7 Emergent social phenomena5. Emotional interaction5.1 Introduction5.2 Emotions and the user experience5.3 Expressive interfaces5.4 Frustrating interfaces5.5 Persuasive technologies and behavioural change5.6 Anthropomorphism and zoomorphism5.7 Models of emotion6. Interfaces6.1 Introduction6.2 Interface types6.3 Natural user interfaces6.4 Which interface?7. Data gathering7.1 Introduction7.2 Five key issues7.3 Data recording7.4 Interviews7.5 Questionnaires7.6 Observation7.7 Choosing and combining techniques8. Data analysis, interpretation, and presentation8.1 Introduction8.2 Qualitative and quantitative8.3 Simple quantitative analysis8.4 Simple qualitative analysis8.5 Tools to support data analysis8.6 Using theoretical frameworks8.7 Presenting the findings9. The process of interaction design9.1 Introduction9.2 What is involved in interaction design?9.3 Some practical issues10. Establishing requirements10.1 Introduction10.2 What, How, and Why?10.3 What are requirements?10.4 Data gathering for requirements10.5 Data analysis, interpretation, and presentation10.6 Task description10.7 Task analysis11. Design, prototyping, and construction11.1 Introduction11.2 Prototyping and construction11.3 Conceptual design: moving from requirements to first design11.4 Physical design: getting concrete11.5 Using scenarios in design11.6 Using prototypes in design11.7 Support for design12. Introducing evaluation12.1 Introduction12.2 The why, what, where, and when of evaluation12.3 Types of evaluation12.4 Evaluation case studies12.5 What did we learn from the case studies?13. An evaluation framework13.1 Introduction13.2 DECIDE: A framework to guide evaluation14. Evaluation Studies: From Controlled to Natural Settings14.1 Introduction14.2 Usability testing14.3 Experiments14.4 Field studies15. Evaluation: Inspections, Analytics and Models15.1 Introduction15.2 Inspections: heuristic evaluation and walkthroughs15.3 Analytics15.4 Predictive models . "A revision of the #1 text in the Human Computer Interaction field, Interaction Design, the third edition is an ideal resource for learning the interdisciplinary skills needed for interaction design, human-computer interaction, information design, web design and ubiquitous computing"-- "Rogers, Preece and Sharp are a bestselling author team, acknowledged leaders and educators in their field, with a strong global reputation.They bring depth of scope to the subject, encompassing the latest technologies and devices including facebook and YouTube.Interaction Design offers a cross-disciplinary, practical and process-oriented approach to Human Computer Interaction, showing not just what principals ought to apply to Interaction Design, but crucially how they can be applied. Motivating examples are included to illustrate both technical, but also social and ethical issues, making the book approachable and adaptable for both Computer Science and non-Computer Science users. Interviews with key HCI luminaries are included and provide an insight into current and future trendsThe text comes with a lively and highly interactive companion web site containing a rich set of resources enabling students to collaborate on experiments and designs, take part in competitions, find resources and communicate with others"-- |
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Beschreibung: | XV, 585 S. Ill., graph. Darst. 25 cm |
ISBN: | 0470665769 0-470-66576-9 9780470665763 978-0-470-66576-3 |