Introduction To HCI
Introduction To HCI
Introduction to HCI
What is human-computer interaction (HCI)?
* HCI concerns:
process: design, evaluation and implementation
on: interactive computing systems for human use
plus: the study of major phenomena surrounding them
Introduction to HCI
The goals of HCI
Ensuring usability.
“A usable software system is one that supports the effective and
efficient completion of tasks in a given work context” (Karat and
Dayton 1995).
Introduction to HCI
The goals of HCI
The bottom-line benefits of usability to development
organizations include:
• Greater profits due to more competitive products/services
• Decreased overall development and maintenance costs
• Decreased customer support costs
• More follow-on business due to satisfied customers
Introduction to HCI
The goals of HCI
• To achieve usability, the design of the user interface to any
interactive product, needs to take into account and be tailored
around a number of factors, including:
• Unique characteristics of the users’ physical and social work
environment
• Unique characteristics and requirements of the users’ tasks, which
are being supported by the software
• Unique capabilities and constraints of the chosen software and/or
hardware and platform for the product
Introduction to HCI
Humans, Computer and Interaction
Introduction to HCI
Different design Needs
Introduction to HCI
Different design Needs
Introduction to HCI
Teaching User Interface Development to Software
Engineers.
Finally, software engineers building user interfaces must know the limits
of their knowledge: when and how to work with human factors engineers
as consultants for design and evaluation, when and how to work with
technical writers for implementation of a system of user guidance, when
and how to work with a statistical consultant, and the difficulty of
measurement and the complexity of making decisions based on data.”
Introduction to HCI
Visibility and Affordance
Introduction to HCI
Importance of HCI
Introduction
In the past, problems with poor interface design of computer software
have contributed to an enormous loss in productivity, ranging from
increases in time taken to input and process information after
computerisation, to deaths from airline crashes due to pilots
misreading the instrument readings on their aircraft.
Introduction to HCI
Importance of HCI
HCI will be increasingly important in the following areas:
Introduction to HCI
Relationship of HCI to other disciplines
Introduction to HCI
HCI is a multidisciplinary field – HCI draws expertise from a number
of different areas of study.
1. Prototyping and and iterative development from software
engineering
Design is seen as opportunistic, concrete, and necessarily iterative. By
providing techniques to quickly construct, evaluate, and change partial
solutions, prototyping has become a fulcrum for system development.
Introduction to HCI
2. Software psychology and human factors of computing systems
This work addressed a wide assortment of questions about people
experienced and how they perform when they interact with computers.
It studied how system response time affects productivity, how people
specify and refine queries, etc.
3. User interface software from computer graphics
Before the 1960s, the focus of computing was literally on
computations, not on intelligibly presenting the results.
4. Models, theories and frameworks from cognitive science
These include the disciplined of linguistics, anthropology, philosophy,
psychology, and computer science.
Introduction to HCI
This guidance would come from general principles of perception and
motor activity, problem-solving and language, communication and
group behaviour etc..
It would also include developing theories of HCI. e.g. GOMS rules
model for analysing routine human-computer interaction.
Introduction to HCI
A student of HCI will not need to know all these other subjects in depth, of
course. However, it is important to be aware that in HCI, we may have to use the
knowledge from some of these disciplines to solve a problem in a certain
situation.
Linguistics
Philosophy
Sociology
Anthropology
Design
Engineering
Ergonomics and human factors
Social and organizational psychology
Cognitive psychology
Artificial intelligence
Introduction to HCI
HCI in the 1990s: HCI research had become
relatively well integrated in computer science.
Introduction to HCI
Topics in HCI