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  2. RITE Method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RITE_Method

    It has many similarities to "traditional" [3] or "discount" [4] usability testing. The tester and team must define a target population for testing, schedule participants to come into the lab, decide on how the users' behaviors will be measured, construct a test script and have participants engage in a verbal protocol (e.g. think aloud).

  3. Usability testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usability_testing

    Examples of products that commonly benefit from usability testing are food, consumer products, websites or web applications, computer interfaces, documents, and devices. Usability testing measures the usability, or ease of use, of a specific object or set of objects, whereas general human–computer interaction studies attempt to formulate ...

  4. Think aloud protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Think_aloud_protocol

    A think-aloud (or thinking aloud) protocol is a method used to gather data in usability testing in product design and development, in psychology and a range of social sciences (e.g., reading, writing, translation research, decision making, and process tracing).

  5. Cognitive walkthrough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_walkthrough

    The walkthrough method does not test real users on the system. The walkthrough will often identify many more problems than you would find with a single, unique user in a single test session; There are social constraints that inhibit the cognitive walkthrough process. These include time pressure, lengthy design discussions and design defensiveness.

  6. User research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_Research

    User research also helps to uncover problems faced by users when they interact with a product and turn them into actionable insights. User research is beneficial in all stages of product development from ideation to market release. [7] Mike Kuniavsky further notes that it is "the process of understanding the impact of design on an audience."

  7. Wikipedia:WikiProject Usability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Wikipedia:WikiProject_Usability

    Proposals: Proposal for Table: namespace and intuitive table editor; Automatic edit summaries (see also Bug 2437) Other: m:Usability and m:Usability design group on Meta; German Wikipedia - usability study (February 2006) German Wikipedia - usability study (external PDF) Wikipedia on OpenUsability at the Wayback Machine (archived February 6, 2007)

  8. User experience design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_Experience_Design

    Usability testing is the most common method designers use to test their designs. The basic idea behind conducting a usability test is to check whether the design of a product or brand works well with the target users. Usability testing is about testing whether the product's design is successful and, if not, how it can be improved.

  9. Usability goals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usability_goals

    Usability goals must be included in every product design process that intends to follow a Human Factors approach (for instance, User-centered design [1] process or Usability Engineering Lifecycle [5] [full citation needed]). They have to be clearly stated from the onset of the process, as soon as the end-users needs, risk of use, contexts and ...