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A mathematical model of the finding of usability problems

In CHI '93: Proceedings of the INTERACT '93 and CHI '93 conference on Human factors in computing systems (1993), pp. 206-213.

X Abstract

For 11 studies, we find that the detection of usability problems as a function of number of users tested or heuristic evaluators employed is well modeled as a Poisson process. The model can be used to plan the amount of evaluation required to achieve desired levels of thoroughness or benefits. Results of early tests can provide estimates of the number of problems left to be found and the number of additional evaluations needed to find a given fraction. With quantitative evaluation costs and detection values, the model can estimate the numbers of evaluations at which optimal cost/benefit ratios are obtained and at which marginal utility vanishes. For a “medium” example, we estimate that 16 evaluations would be worth their cost, with maximum benefit/cost ratio at four.

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This article has been bookmarked 9 times, initially on 2007-05-31.

2009-12-03 User klurie
2009-06-28 User mjparnell
2009-05-18 User lucybuykx , 1 note

Worked on the data from the 1990 heuristic evaluation studies and compared with data from user testing studies.

Plotted Poisson model curves through the problems found against cumullating evaluators. Worked out optimal number of evaluators, come up with some figures for benefits and costs. Conclude that benefits are higher than costs for both HE & UT and Poisson is good for describing.

2009-06-15 18:41:07
2009-02-11 User fiacobelli
2008-04-25 User robertlischke
2008-01-07 User bangb
2007-07-13 User simonjudge
Group AssistiveTechnology
2007-05-31 User Najko
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