6533b855fe1ef96bd12b114b
RESEARCH PRODUCT
A reflective characterisation of occasional user
Kenneth C. Scott-brownJuan FalguerasAntonio Luis CarrilloSantiago Martinezsubject
business.industryComputer scienceUser modelingUser journey05 social sciencesComputer user satisfaction02 engineering and technologyUser requirements documentUser interface designHuman-Computer InteractionWorld Wide WebArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)User experience designInterface metaphorHuman–computer interaction020204 information systems0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesUser interfacebusiness050107 human factorsGeneral Psychologydescription
This work revisits established user classifications and aims to characterise a historically unspecified user category, the Occasional User (OU). Three user categories, novice, intermediate and expert, have dominated the work of user interface (UI) designers, researchers and educators for decades. These categories were created to conceptualise user's needs, strategies and goals around the 80s. Since then, UI paradigm shifts, such as direct manipulation and touch, along with other advances in technology, gave new access to people with little computer knowledge. This fact produced a diversification of the existing user categories not observed in the literature review of traditional classification of users. The findings of this work include a new characterisation of the occasional user, distinguished by user's uncertainty of repetitive use of an interface and little knowledge about its functioning. In addition, the specification of the OU, together with principles and recommendations will help UI community to informatively design for users without requiring a prospective use and previous knowledge of the UI. The OU is an essential type of user to apply user-centred design approach to understand the interaction with technology as universal, accessible and transparent for the user, independently of accumulated experience and technological era that users live in. Significance of user classification for the design of interactive systems.Analysis of user classifications, identifying common definition parameters.Notification of the absence of the Occasional User in previous classifications.Presentation of specific parameters and examples of Occasional Users.Enumeration of main implications of the Occasional User in user interface design.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-05-01 | Computers in Human Behavior |