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NEEDS. DESIGN. EVALUATE. IMPLEMENT. Design Principles . John C. Tang September 13, 2007. Today. Updates on facebook project Conceptual model Feedback Constraints Affordances Action cycle Gulf of execution Gulf of evaluation Time for group work. facebook group project.
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NEEDS DESIGN EVALUATE IMPLEMENT Design Principles John C. Tang September 13, 2007
Today • Updates on facebook project • Conceptual model • Feedback • Constraints • Affordances • Action cycle • Gulf of execution • Gulf of evaluation • Time for group work
facebook group project • Discussion section topic, Sept. 19 • Introduction to facebook platform • Basic familiarity with features, constraints of platform • Project ideas • Yes! You need to do something different • We know about the applications in lists • Group design process generate new idea • Convince us why it is better than prior ideas
facebook group project (2) • Implementation effort should be realistic • Must demonstrate working prototype • OK if not all aspects are working • User study must test for complete idea • Hybrid working prototype, paper prototype • Wizard of Oz
Great discussion sections! • Really appreciated good work • All slides uploaded to the web site • Allowing extra time (until 5:00pm today) to form groups • Take advantage of office hours (Brian, me, Christine) for feedback on topic ideas • Stanford Big Face(book)-off?
Social networking ? • Social networking fueled by “exhibitionism” • Social status • Contests • Popularity • Alternatives • Collectivism • Activism
FB: Causes • Promote awareness of UN Millennium project goals • Educate people about goals • Award “badge” for passing quiz • Community recognition for shared awareness
Criteria: Review facebook application (Due Sept. 18) • Pick an interesting application • Clearly explain to us what it does (illustrated) • Observe at least 2 non CS160 people using application (give demographic info) • Write review • What works well • What doesn’t work well • Support with evidence from observations • Suggested improvements • Shouldn’t be more than around 5 pages
Design nuts & bolts • Identified need • Conducted Contextual Inquiry • Stimulated ideating skills • Exercised visualizing skills • Working towards getting pixels on screen
Conceptual model View of the system as the user believes it to be, especially how the user can act upon it and what the system’s responses mean
Conceptual Model of a System • Design Model • The model the designer has of how the system works • System Image • How the system actually works • The structure and behavior of the system • User’s Model • How the user understands how the system works The most important thing to design is the user’s model. Everything else should be subordinated to making that model clear, obvious, and substantial. That is almost exactly the opposite of how most software is designed. David Liddle
Raising the bar: self-evident design • Back in 1946, users had to be highly trained to use ENIAC • Researchers • Military • technicians
Conceptual Model of a System (augmented) • Design Model • The model the designer has of how the system works • System Image • How the system actually works • The structure and behavior of the system • User’s Model • How the user understands how the system works • Some “repair” between the designer and user • User manual • FAQ
A bad example • Radiator control COLD HOT
A good conceptual model • Allows users to reason through: • What can I do? • How do I do it? • What result will it have? • What is it telling me?
Conceptual Model and Reality • User’s conceptual model does not always have to match reality • Must be consistent with system’s behavior, reactions
My new refrigerator • Temperature controls for GE EnergyStar refrigerator • We know from Norman that this is probably not how refrigerators work • But it’s how we want to control temperature
Iterative revision of the conceptual model • As user interacts, conceptual model is revised • Breakdowns (unfulfilled expectations or unclear representations) require explicilty revising conceptual model • Consistency is key for developing robust conceptual model
Norman’s 7 stages of action • User • Translating goals • To actions • Based on user’s model
Norman’s 7 stages of action • System presents results back to user • According to design model
Gulfs of execution and evaluation • Note: We’re even assuming the computer works perfectly!
The Gulfs Where thought is required • Gulf of execution -- thinking required to figure out how to get something done -- transforming high-level intention into specific physical actions • Gulf of evaluation -- thinking required to understand what is being perceived -- transforming raw sensory data into an understanding of objects, properties and events
The gulfs simplified • Gulf of execution • How do I do it? • Gulf of evaluation • What did it do? evaluation execution
Overcoming the gulfs • Gulf of execution • Make commands and mechanisms of the system match the thoughts and goals of the user • Gulf of evaluation • Make output displays present a good conceptual model of the system that is readily perceived, interpreted, and evaluated
Design Principles • Visibility • Natural mapping • Feedback Affordances
Visibility • Primary controls visible • Secondary controls discoverable
Three crucial “visibilities” • Of objects of interest • Of available actions • Of system status (feedback)
Car radio • Primary controls visible • But how do you set radio station preset?
iPod • How do you scan forward?
Learned conventions • De facto standards that become established over time
Natural mapping • Naturally connecting user’s model with system model • taking advantage of physical analogies and cultural standards • Physical properties (stove burner layout) • Metaphorical/linguistic (on is up) • Analogous function (playback control buttons) “Natural” is individual and culture-specific
Natural mappings • Minimize the number of cognitive steps to transform action into effect, or perception into comprehension. • Applicable to both action and displays (execution and evaluation). • Minimize the need for labels, instructions, help systems.
Different contexts for “natural” • Social and organizational contexts • Office work • Off the desktop • Out-of-doors • Cultural norms • Red and green • Reading direction • What may be offensive
Feedback • Timely communication of system status
Visibility of system status, feedback • At all times, the system visually indicates what state it is in. • Examples: • - Hourglass “wait” icon • - Progress bars • - Security padlock on browser
Progressive vs. interruptive feedback • Feedback can be progressive, a part of the sequence of actions themselves • Feedback can also be interruptive, a break in the sequence of actions • Smooth is usually preferred to interruptive
Multimodal feedback • Visual • Aural • Tactile • Smell?
Affordances • “...the perceived and actual properties of the thing, primarily those fundamental properties that determine just how the thing could possibly be used.” [Norman]
In other words • How a thing appears tells us how the thing can be used. • (Whether the implied use matches the intended use is a question for design.)
Knurling provides a visual affordance for “gripping.” Example
Example I’m Clickable
William Gaver, 1991 • “People perceive the environment directly in terms of its potentials for action.” • “An affordance of an object … refers to attributes of both the object and the actor.” • “…when the apparent affordances of an artifact matches its intended use, the artifact is easy to operate. When apparent affordances suggest different actions than those for which the object is designed, errors are common.”
Affordances and metaphors • Metaphors meant to “jump start” user’s conceptual model for a system • Affordances meant to “jump start” user’s conceptual model for interacting with an artifact • As with metaphors, if affordances are designed poorly, they thwart developing a correct conceptual model