Interaction design

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Interaction design IS 403: User Interface Design Shaun Kane

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Interaction design. IS 403: User Interface Design Shaun Kane. Today. More on interaction design Getting started with user testing. Check-in on A6. How is everybody doing? Problems? Need feedback? A7 posted. Interaction design. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Interaction design

Page 1: Interaction design

Interaction design

IS 403: User Interface DesignShaun Kane

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Today• More on interaction design• Getting started with user testing

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Check-in on A6• How is everybody doing?• Problems? Need feedback?

• A7 posted

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Interaction design“Most people make the mistake of thinking design is what it looks like. People think it’s this veneer – that the designers are handed this box and told, ‘Make it look good!’ That’s not what we think design is. It’s not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works.” – Steve Jobs

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What makes a good design?• What skills have we picked up so far?

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What makes a good design?• Requirements gathering• Good information design and architecture (IS 387)• Good interaction design• Testing, iteration, improvement

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Some recap from IS 387

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Consider a web site…

What questionsmight a user have?

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Consider a web site…

What questionsmight a user have?

Where am I?Where can I go?What can I do here?What did I just do?

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Tools from IS 387• Site ID• Global / persistent navigation• “You are here”• Breadcrumbs

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Site ID• The main site, brand identity• Click to go home

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Global navigation• It should be persistent• 5 elements

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Utilities• Site-wide elements that are not part of the

content hierarchy• Separate them, so we don’t have to

shoehorn them into content

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“You are here”• Show user’s position in hierarchy• Helps user understand hierarchy• Can be shown in several ways

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BreadcrumbsHierarchical vs. chronological

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Buttons and links• Make them actions

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More about interaction design

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The holy texts of usability

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The holy texts of usability

<- how people think

tools, methods ->processes

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Norman• You’ve probably read it before

• Worth a reread– Now you have fun projects to apply it to

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Important ideas from Norman• It’s not the user’s fault• Affordances• Conceptual models• Make things visible (system status, feedback)• Feedback• Mapping• Constraints

• Next time: execution and evaluating

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Affordances• Examples in everyday life/this class?

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Affordances

Jared Sinclair, “Untouchtable”. http://blog.jaredsinclair.com/post/64880801326/untouchable

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Perceived vs. actual affordance

Affords sitting Affords pushing Perceived affordance

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Affordances vs. convention• What does this do?

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Affordances vs. convention• What does this do?

• A cultural convention: blue underlined things are web links

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Conceptual models• How the system works vs. how the user

thinks it works• Examples?

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Conceptual models

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Conceptual models

• Good conceptual models aren’t always the same as the system model

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System status and feedback• What’s going on?• What did I just do?

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System status

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System status

Good?Bad?

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System status

Good?- Tells me I need to wait

Bad?- Why?- How long?- What is it doing?

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Feedback

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Mapping• What is it?• What is a good mapping?

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Mapping

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Mapping

Natural mapping

Arbitrary mapping

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Constraints• What are they?• Good/bad?

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Constraints

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Don’t do thisPhone number:

Phone number MUST be formatted XXX-YYY-ZZZZ

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Class activity• Take out your phones (no really!)

• In groups of two, find good and bad examples of:– Affordances, mapping, feedback, constraints

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Next time• Norman, model of execution• Usability heuristics (Nielsen)