Pervasive Usability
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Web design. (Discuss) |
This article is orphaned as few or no other articles link to it. Please help introduce links in articles on related topics. (December 2007) |
This article or section relies largely or entirely upon a single source. Please help improve this article by introducing appropriate citations of additional sources. |
Users should be considered throughout the website design process. Usability should not be an afterthought. Testing and fixing a website after it has been built is inefficient and unlikely to produce good results. The best approach to take is to incorporate a model of pervasive usability into your design and production process (Foraker Design 2005).
Brinck et al. (2001) have proposed an issue to pervasive usability on the website, called Pervasive Usability Process (PUP), come to carry on the assessment and analysis of relevant research.
[edit] Definition
Pervasive Usability (PU) advocates the application of methods to evaluate a design’s usability at every stage of the design process, keeping in mind the goals of the project and the users' needs, and stands out from other usability testing methods as it can be conducted throughout the product’s lifecycle, not just in the preliminary development stages. It’s also unique because the steps involved in this method are quite simple, and can be less taxing on those conducting the test (Suneet, 2003).
[edit] References
- Tom Brinck, Scott D. Wood, and Darren Gergle (2001). Usability for the Web: designing web sites that work. Morgan Kaufmann, 12–35.
This article is uncategorized. Please categorize this article to list it with similar articles. (May 2008) |