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  2. System usability scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_usability_scale

    In systems engineering, the system usability scale (SUS) is a simple, ten-item attitude Likert scale giving a global view of subjective assessments of usability.It was developed by John Brooke [1] at Digital Equipment Corporation in the UK in 1986 as a tool to be used in usability engineering of electronic office systems.

  3. Questionnaire for User Interaction Satisfaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Questionnaire_for_User...

    The Questionnaire For User Interaction Satisfaction (QUIS) is a tool developed to assess users' subjective satisfaction with specific aspects of the human-computer interface. It was developed in 1987 by a multi-disciplinary team of researchers at the University of Maryland Human–Computer Interaction Lab .

  4. ISO 9241 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_9241

    The questionnaire is a seven-point Likert scale in which scale 1 indicates the task as ‘very difficult’, and scale 7 indicates the task as ‘very easy’. [ 12 ] System Satisfaction is used to evaluate the overall usability of the apps through System Usability Scale (SUS), which is a usability assessment questionnaire with reliable and ...

  5. Component-based usability testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Component-based_usability...

    While holistic oriented usability questionnaires such as the system usability scale (SUS) examine the usability of a system on several dimensions such as defined in ISO 9241 Part 11 standard effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction, a component-based usability questionnaire (CBUQ) [4] is a questionnaire which can be used to evaluate the ...

  6. Usability testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usability_testing

    In translated survey products, usability testing has shown that "cultural fitness" must be considered in the sentence and word levels and in the designs for data entry and navigation, [21] and that presenting translation and visual cues of common functionalities (tabs, hyperlinks, drop-down menus, and URLs) help to improve the user experience. [22]

  7. User experience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_experience

    User experience of an interactive product or a website is usually measured by a number of methods, including questionnaires, focus groups, observed usability tests, user journey mapping and other methods. A freely available questionnaire (available in several languages) is the User Experience Questionnaire (UEQ). [15]

  8. Heuristic evaluation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heuristic_evaluation

    Quite often, usability problems that are discovered are categorized—often on a numeric scale—according to their estimated impact on user performance or acceptance. Often the heuristic evaluation is conducted in the context of use cases (typical user tasks), to provide feedback to the developers on the extent to which the interface is likely ...

  9. Usability goals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usability_goals

    [1] [2] [full citation needed] For this assessment to be objective, there is a need for measurable goals [3] (for instance in terms of easiness of use or of learning) that the system must achieve. That kind of goal is called a usability goal (or also usability requirement [1] [4]). They are objective criteria against which the results of the ...