Immediate Usability: A Case Study of Public Access Design for a Community Photo Library (2003)

TitleImmediate Usability: A Case Study of Public Access Design for a Community Photo Library (2003)
Publication TypeReports
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsKules B, Kang H, Plaisant C, Rose A, Shneiderman B
Series TitleInstitute for Systems Research Technical Reports
Date Published2005///
KeywordsTechnical Report
Abstract

This paper describes a novel instantiation of a digital photo library in a public access system. It demonstrates how designers can utilize characteristics of a target user community (social constraints, trust, and a lack of anonymity) to provide capabilities that would be impractical in other types of public access systems. It also presents a compact set of design principles and guidelines for ensuring the immediate usability of public access information systems. These principles and guidelines were derived from our experience developing PhotoFinder Kiosk, a community photo library. Attendees of a major HCI conference (CHI 2001 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems) successfully used the tool to browse and annotate collections of photographs spanning 20 years of HCI-related conferences, producing a richly annotated photo history of the field of human-computer interaction. Observations and log data were used to evaluate the tool and develop the guidelines. They provide specific guidance for practitioners, as well as a useful framework for additional research in public access interfaces.

URLhttp://drum.lib.umd.edu/handle/1903/6504