Selective Modeling to Support Task Migratability of Interactive Artifacts - Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2011
Conference Papers Year : 2011

Selective Modeling to Support Task Migratability of Interactive Artifacts

Anke Dittmar
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Peter Forbrig
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  • PersonId : 994726

Abstract

Selective modeling is suggested as a technique that encourages designers to mix exploratory, analytical, and empirical design activities in interaction design. The co-development of models and prototypes of interactive systems is proposed to support a better balance between formal and explorative design approaches. Models serve to inform design decisions but also to analyze emerging alternatives of prototypical implementations.Task migratability is a usability design principle that describes how control for task execution is transferred between system and user. Refined flexible task allocation is rarely achievable through pure top-down decomposition as used in many model-based approaches. The paper shows at the example of HOPS models how selective modeling can be applied to develop prototypes in a deliberated evolutionary way by using models to express different viewpoints and to explore design options at different levels of granularity.
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hal-01591828 , version 1 (22-09-2017)

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Anke Dittmar, Peter Forbrig. Selective Modeling to Support Task Migratability of Interactive Artifacts. 13th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (INTERACT), Sep 2011, Lisbon, Portugal. pp.571-588, ⟨10.1007/978-3-642-23765-2_39⟩. ⟨hal-01591828⟩
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