Experiments in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) work by deliberately introducing interventions that might affect the interaction between humans and computers, and describing the effects of these interventions. They form an important part of HCI methodology, and help to understand human-computer interaction and characterize the value of user interfaces. Yet, few intermediate guidelines exist on how to design, run, and report experiments.
This book presents such guidelines. It briefly argues why experiments are invaluable for advancing human-computer interaction beyond technical innovation, and then goes on to identify heuristics of doing good experiments. These include: how to build on existing work in devising hypotheses and selecting measures; how to craft challenging comparisons, rather than biased win-lose setups; how to design experiments so as to rule out alternative explanations; how to provide evidence for conclusions; and how to narrate findings.
Some Whys and Hows of Experiments in Human-Computer Interaction argues and seeks to exemplify how the quality of experiments in HCI can been improved through the use of these heuristics, which are exemplified by excellent experiments in human-computer interaction. This is an invaluable reference for all experimenters in HCI.
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