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CHI
2000
ACM

Measuring usability: are effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction really correlated?

13 years 9 months ago
Measuring usability: are effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction really correlated?
Usability comprises the aspects effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction. The correlations between these aspects are not well understood for complex tasks. We present data from an experiment where 87 subjects solved 20 information retrieval tasks concerning programming problems. The correlation between efficiency, as indicated by task completion time, and effectiveness, as indicated by quality of solution, was negligible. Generally, the correlations among the usability aspects depend in a complex way on the application domain, the user's experience, and the use context. Going through three years of CHI Proceedings, we find that 11 out of 19 experimental studies involving complex tasks account for only one or two aspects of usability. When these studies make claims concerning overall usability, they rely on risky assumptions about correlations between usability aspects. Unless domain specific studies suggest otherwise, effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction should be consi...
Erik Frøkjær, Morten Hertzum, Kasper
Added 01 Aug 2010
Updated 01 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2000
Where CHI
Authors Erik Frøkjær, Morten Hertzum, Kasper Hornbæk
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