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Leonardo's Laptop: Human Needs and the New Computing Ben Shneiderman Founding Director (1983-2000), Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory Professor, Department of Computer Science Member, Institutes for Advanced Computer Studies & Systems Research University of Maryland ben@cs.umd.edu.
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Leonardo's Laptop: Human Needs and the New ComputingBen ShneidermanFounding Director (1983-2000), Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory Professor, Department of Computer ScienceMember, Institutes for Advanced Computer Studies &Systems ResearchUniversity of Marylandben@cs.umd.edu
Human-Computer Interaction Laboratory Interdisciplinary research community - Computer Science & Psychology - Information Studies & Education (www.cs.umd.edu/hcil)
Scientific Approach(beyond user friendly) • Specify users and tasks • Predict and measure • time to learn • speed of performance • rate of human errors • human retention over time • Assess subjective satisfaction(Questionnaire for User Interface Satisfaction) • Accommodate individual differences • Consider social, organizational & cultural context
Design Issues • Input devices & strategies • Keyboards, pointing devices, voice • Direct manipulation • Menus, forms, commands • Output devices & formats • Screens, windows, color, sound • Text, tables, graphics • Instructions, messages, help • Collaboration & communities • Manuals, tutorials, training www.awl.com/DTUI usableweb.com hcibib.org useit.com
Library of Congress • Scholars, Journalists, Citizens • Teachers, Students
Visible Human Explorer (NLM) • Doctors • Surgeons • Researchers • Students
NASA Environmental Data • Scientists • Farmers • Land planners • Students
Bureau of Census • Economists, Policy makers, Journalists • Teachers, Students
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) Renaissance Man • Painter • Inventor • Visionary • Mathematician • Philosopher • Engineer
Why Leonardo Inspires Us He integrated - Scientific outlook - Practical technology - Artistic skill
Leonardo: An Inspirational Muse Three lessons: 1) Human needs drive innovation 2) Universal usability 3) Creativity support tools
1) Human needs drive innovation • Jefferson: Life, Liberty & the Pursuit of Happiness • Roosevelt: Freedom of speech & expression, religion, from want, from fear • Maslow: Hierarchy of human needs • Physiological • Safety • Love • Esteem • Self-Actualization • Covey: Living, Loving, Learning & Leaving a legacy
Spectrum of relationships Family & Friends (2-20 close intimates) Colleagues & Neighbors (10-1000 regular encounters) Members & Residents (1000-1,000,000 professionals or city residents ) Citizenry & Markets (larger communities)
Range of Activities Collect: Information Relate: Communication Create: Innovation Donate: Dissemination
Periodic table Relationships: Family & Friends Colleagues & Neighbors Members & Residents Citizenry & Markets Activities: Collect Relate Create Donate
Periodic table Relationships: Family & Friends Colleagues & Neighbors Members & Residents Citizenry & Markets Activities: Collect Relate Create Donate Skeptics corner - Aren’t relationships more complex - Are these useful activities?
Examples: Collecting information Relationships: Family & Friends Colleagues & Neighbors Members & Residents Citizenry & Markets Activities: Collect Relate Create Donate LifeLines InfoDoor InfoWall WebBush
Examples: Relating to others Relationships: Family & Friends Colleagues & Neighbors Members & Residents Citizenry & Markets Activities: Collect Relate Create Donate
Examples: Creating a future Relationships: Family & Friends Colleagues & Neighbors Members & Residents Citizenry & Markets Activities: Collect Relate Create Donate
Examples: Disseminating & Leading Relationships: Family & Friends Colleagues & Neighbors Members & Residents Citizenry & Markets Activities: Collect Relate Create Donate
Human needs drive innovation Relationships: Family & Friends Colleagues & Neighbors Members & Residents Citizenry & Markets Activities: Collect Relate Create Donate
2) Universal Usability • Problem: Confusion, frustration, and remorse dominate user experiences • Survey of 6000 users finds 5.1 hours/week wasted • Incompatible files, interfaces, networks, hardware • Poorly designed websites lacking accessibility policy • Solutions: • Raise user expectations • Conduct research • Provide practical tools & methods
2) Universal Usability • Problem: Confusion, frustration, and remorse dominate user experiences • Survey of 6000 users finds 5.1 hours/week wasted • Incompatible files, interfaces, networks, hardware • Poorly designed websites lacking accessibility policy • Solutions: • Raise user expectations • Conduct research • Provide practical tools & methods Skeptics corner - Dumbing down - Lowest common denominator
2) Universal Usability • Problem: Confusion, frustration, and remorse dominate user experiences • Survey of 6000 users finds 5.1 hours/week wasted • Incompatible files, interfaces, networks, hardware • Poorly designed websites lacking accessibility policy • Solutions: • Raise user expectations • Conduct research • Provide practical tools & methods
ACM Code of Ethics In a fair society, all individuals would have equal opportunity to participate in, or benefit from, the use of computer resources regardless of race, sex, religion, age, disability, national origin or other such similar factors.
Internet Use by Education - 1998 • Percent of U.S. Households Using the Internet Total U.S., Rural, Urban, and Central City Areas Falling Through the Net: Defining the Digital Divide www.ntia.doc.gov
Internet Use by Income - 1998 • Percent of U.S. Households Using the Internet Total U.S., Rural, Urban, and Central City Areas Falling Through the Net: Defining the Digital Divide www.ntia.doc.gov
Research Agenda • Technology variety: Support broad range of hardware, software, and network access • User diversity: Accommodate users with different skills, knowledge, age, gender, disabilities, disabling conditions (mobility, injury, noise, sunlight), literacy, culture, income, etc. • Gaps in user knowledge: Bridge the gap between what users know and what they need to know Communications of the ACM, May 2000
1 to 100 range in network bandwidth 9.6K 56K 10,000Kbps Technology variety: Support broad range of hardware, software, and network access Device Independence Input: keyboard, speech,... Output: visual, auditory,... Conversion: Text-speech Speech-text,... 1 to 100 range in processor speeds 286 486 Pentium 1 to 100 range in screen sizes Palm devices Laptops Large Desktop or Wall Display 30,000 480,000 3,840,000 pixels Software Versions Compatibility File conversion Multiple platforms
Language & Culture Western, Eastern, developing... Personality Introvert vs extravert Thinking vs feeling Risk aversion Locus of control Planful vs playful User diversity: Accommodate different users Disabilities Visual, auditory, motoric, cognitiveDisabling conditions Mobility, injury, noise, sunlight Age Young to old Gender Male or Female Income Impoverished to wealthy Skills Computer newbie to hacker Knowledge Domain novice to expert
Gaps in User Knowledge - Strategies Bridge the gap between what users know and what they need to know Online Learning (evolutionary, phased) Introductory tutorials Getting started manuals, Cue cards Walkthroughs/Demos Minimalist/Active Design Layered Level-structured Task-oriented Training Fade-able scaffolding Training wheels Minimalist Online help Context sensitive, tables of contents, Indexes, Keyword search, FAQs, Newsgroups, Chat rooms Online communities Customer service Email Phone Help desks
3) Creativity Support Tools • More people, more creative, more of the time • Revolutionary breakthroughs, paradigm shifts, H-creativity • Evolutionary, normal science, music & art, creative knowledge work • Impromptu everyday creativity
Eight Activities • 1) Searching & browsing digital libraries • 2) Consulting with peers & mentors • 3) Visualizing data & processes • 4) Thinking by free associations • 5) Exploring solutions - What if tools • 6) Composing artifacts & performances • 7) Reviewing & replaying session histories • 8) Disseminating results
Eight Activities • 1) Searching & browsing digital libraries • 2) Consulting with peers & mentors • 3) Visualizing data & processes • 4) Thinking by free associations • 5) Exploring solutions - What if tools • 6) Composing artifacts & performances • 7) Reviewing & replaying session histories • 8) Disseminating results Skeptics corner - Tools can limit imagination - Not everyone wants to be creative - Creativity can be malicious
3) Visualizing data & processes The eye… the window of the soul, is the principal means by which the central sense can most completely and abundantly appreciate the infinite works of nature. Leonardo da Vinci (1452 - 1519)
Information Visualization: Using Vision to Think • Visual bandwidth is enormous • Human perceptual skills are remarkable • Trend, cluster, gap, outlier... • Color, size, shape, proximity... • Human image storage is fast and vast • Opportunities • Spatial layouts & coordination • Information visualization • Scientific visualization & simulation • Telepresence & augmented reality • Virtual environments
Information Visualization: Mantra • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand • Overview, zoom & filter, details-on-demand
Information Visualization: Data Types • 1-D Linear Document Lens, SeeSoft, Info Mural, Value Bars • 2-D Map GIS, ArcView, PageMaker, Medical imagery • 3-D World CAD, Medical, Molecules, Architecture • Multi-Dim Parallel Coordinates, Spotfire, XGobi, Visage, Influence Explorer, TableLens, DEVise • Temporal Perspective Wall, LifeLines, Lifestreams, Project Managers, DataSpiral • Tree Cone/Cam/Hyperbolic, TreeBrowser, Treemap • Network Netmap, netViz, SeeNet, Butterfly, Multi-trees (Online Library of Information Visualization Environments) otal.umd.edu/Olive
Treemap - view large trees • Space filling • Space limited • Color coding • Size coding • Requires learning TreeViz (Mac, Johnson, 1992) NBA-Tree(Sun, Turo, 1993) Winsurfer (Teittinen, 1996) Diskmapper (Windows, Micrologic) Treemap97 (Windows, UMd) (Shneiderman, ACM Trans. on Graphics, 1992)