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Developing Usability Tools and Techniques for Designing and Testing Web Sites. Jean Scholtz Sharon Laskowski Laura Downey. Approach. Rapid, remote, and automated Case studies used to identify possible tools/ techniques Development of tool/technique
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Developing Usability Tools and Techniques for Designing and Testing Web Sites Jean Scholtz Sharon Laskowski Laura Downey
Approach • Rapid, remote, and automated • Case studies • used to identify possible tools/ techniques • Development of tool/technique • Use of tool/technique to determine additional functionality, type of sites applicable to
Usability Awareness Tools • Can be used by non-usability professionals • Educates about usability and points out potential usability problems
WebSAT • WebSAT • web guidelines turned into Perl scripts • checks static html code • accessibility • form use • maintainability • navigation • performance • readability
Usability Tools and Techniques • Goals • reduce time spent in testing and analysis • reach a wider audience • provide more efficient methods for obtaining usability information • 2 tools and 2 techniques • WebCAT and WebVIP • Beta testing and virtual scenario collection
WebCAT • Category analysis tool • Provides way to check your classification scheme remotely
WebVIP • Provides a way to log and timestamp links in an instrumented web site • Used in conjunction with a set of tasks usability engineers can gather data about the time and paths of users carrying out these tasks.
Beta Testing • Used this technique for a small, focused web application • Data collected in 3 ways • rating questions • open-ended comments • actual end product of web application
Results • Open-ended comments gave us “best” results- unique problems, special situations • Ratings allowed us to verify that second version had made some improvements • Data collection showed problems that were not caught in other methods • “Test” submissions increased data by 25%
Recommendations • Use with focused web applications • Provide short rating scale • good for comparisons as well as “usability focus” • Provide “test” option • Provide way to get open-ended comments • Collect end product to examine
Virtual Participatory Design Meeting • Redesign of NIST Virtual Library (NVL) • 2 sets of end users • library workers • users • Started with library workers • Introduced scenarios to them in face to face meeting
Results • In a two week period, collected 28 scenarios • 18 included comments • Classified these into several categories which will be used in design and in usability testing • Plan to use this with users as well
Recommendations • Use with groups who feel comfortable using electronic communication • Provide examples • Use e-mail to alert group to new scenarios • Do a pilot test of the scenario data collection
Future • Collect information on usage of tools and techniques • Http://zing.ncsl.nist.gov/~webmet/ • Document additional functionality and site applicability • Carryout more case studies to determine new tools/ techniques