Changes for page Measuring Instruments
Last modified by Sofia Kostakonti on 2022/04/04 12:04
From version
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edited by Sofia Kostakonti
on 2022/04/03 16:03
on 2022/04/03 16:03
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To version
2.1


edited by Veikko Saikkonen
on 2022/03/01 11:29
on 2022/03/01 11:29
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... ... @@ -1,36 +1,19 @@ 1 1 2 -F orthe evaluation of a prototype, there are several frameworksthat can be followed, starting with DECIDE[1]. Decide stands for:2 += Frameworks = 3 3 4 -* **D**etermine the goals 5 -* **E**xplore the questions 6 -* **C**hoose evaluation approach and methods 7 -* **I**dentify practical issues 8 -* **D**ecide about ethical issues 9 -* **E**valuate, analyze, interpret, present data 4 +== DECIDE == 10 10 11 -First, we would have to determine the high-level goals for the study and the motivation behind them, since they can influence how we approach it. Then, we choose the evaluation approach, the methods that will be used, whether these are based on quantitative or qualitative data, and the process of data collecting, analysis, and presentation. At the same time, any practical issues, such as participants, budget, or schedule, are identified and a pilot study is performed if needed. It is important to adhere to any ethical procedures that are in place, to ensure the participant knows their rights and is protected. Finally, the evaluation of the data takes place, where it is determined whether the results are in any way unreliable, invalid, biased, related to the environment and whether they generalize well. 6 +**D**etermine the goals 7 +- What are the high-level goals? Who wants it and why? The goals influence the approach of the study 12 12 13 - AnotherframeworkoftenusedisIMPACT[2]:9 +**E**xplore the questions 14 14 15 -* **I**ntention 16 -* **M**easures and metrics 17 -* **P**eople 18 -* **A**ctivities 19 -* **C**ontext 20 -* **T**echnologies 11 +**C**hoose evaluation approach and methods 21 21 22 - These are the several elements that needto beconsidered whentrying to establish evaluation objectives. First, we should present the objectives and the claims ofthe study.Furthermore, the specific measuresand metricsthat will be used need to be determined, followed by the participants and the activities they willperform based on a specific use case. We should also define the context,social, ethical, physical, or environmental, and finally, we must decide on the technologies we will use, both regarding hardware and software.13 +**I**dentify practical issues 23 23 24 - Regarding the evaluation methods, there are two types: formative and summative evaluation. The formative evaluation is based on open-ended questions that have to do with specific processes of the interaction, whereas the summative evaluation focuses on the overall effect andsummarizeswhether the objective hasbeen reached. For measuringtheseevaluations, bothqualitative and quantitative datacan be examined. The goalof the qualitative data isto explore and discover patterns and themes and that of the quantitativedata isto describe, explain and predict based on the outcomes. A combination of the two is often optimal.15 +**D**ecide about ethical issues 25 25 26 - Another factor that needs to be considered during an evaluation study is theexperiment design. Thereare two types: the within-subjects designand the between-subject design. The former calls for performingall the test conditions on all participants and gettingrepeated measures. This design needs fewer subjects and reduces the variance,however, there is thepossibility of carry-over effectsfrom oneinteractionto the next andthe setup can be more challenging since itrequires more time. The latter is performed on different groups of participants, each undergoing only one test condition. It is much simpler to execute but there might be greater variance due to inter-subject differences in characteristics.17 +**E**valuate, analyze, interpret, present data 27 27 28 -When executing an experiment, it is also interesting to examine the interaction from multiple lenses, in order to identify issues and opportunities that are not immediately obvious. That can mean from the perspective of a different stakeholder that is not the main user, other groups that might not directly interact with the system or even a more technical or legal perspective. 29 29 30 - 31 -For our study, the process we followed mostly resembles the IMPACT framework since we focused on each of these elements separately and tried to combine them to build our evaluation study. 32 - 33 - 34 -[1] Kurniawan, S. (2004). Interaction design: Beyond human–computer interaction by Preece, Sharp and Rogers (2001), ISBN 0471492787. 35 -[2] Benyon, D., Turner, P., & Turner, S. (2005). Designing interactive systems: People, activities, contexts, technologies. Pearson Education. 36 -
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -xwiki:XWiki.FrankBroz - Comment
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -Don't forget to fill in the specifics of your study. - Date
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... ... @@ -1,1 +1,0 @@ 1 -2022-03-22 08:33:36.109