In this chapters, Zhu and Proctor discuss the evaluation of web usability. Defining web usability as "concerned with how easy or difficult a Web site or Web-based software is to learn and use" (p. 321), the authors start with a discussion on the analyses of some of the important aspects of a website: the purpose, the target audience, and the core user tasks. The major section of the chapter is focused on a survey on the methods of web usability evaluation, including usability inspections (heuristic evaluation and cognitive walkthrough), usability testing, prototyping (paper prototyping and interactive prototyping), field methods/observation (ethnographic methods, field trials, diary studies), interviews, focus groups and questionnaires, and web-based methods (automated sessions, web logs, and opinion polls). The authors then offer a discussion on reliability and validity issues, and issues concerning the ethics of working with participants.
This is a great succinct survey of methods available for web usability studies. The methods discussed in the chapter cover both empirical and non-empirical (heuristic) methods, both qualitative and quantitative methods, and lab testing, fieldwork, and textual analysis. The section on rigor and ethics is also very important and useful when researchers apply these methods.
No comments:
Post a Comment