Appropriating Heuristic Evaluation for Mobile Computing

Enrico Bertini1, Tiziana Catarci2, Alan Dix3, Silvia Gabrielli4, Steve Kimani5 and Giuseppe Santucci2

1 DIUF, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland
2 DIS - University of Rome "La Sapienza", Rome, Italy
3 Computing Department - Lancaster University, InfoLab21, Lancaster, UK
4 HCI Lab - Department of Math and Computer Science, University of Udine, Udine, Italy
5 Institute of Computer Science and Information Technology, JKUAT, Nairobi, Kenya

Paper in the International Journal of Mobile Human Computer Interaction (IJMHCI), 1(1):20-41. DOI: 10.4018/jmhci.2009010102

Download draft paper (PDF, 470Kb)


Heuristic evaluation has proven popular for desktop and web interfaces, both in practical design and as a research topic. Compared to full user studies, heuristic evaluation can be highly cost-effective, allowing a large proportion of usability flaws to be detected ahead of full development with limited resource investment. Mobile computing shares many usability issues with more conventional interfaces. However, it also poses particular problems for usability evaluation related to aspects such as limited screen real estate, intermittent user attention, and contextual factors. This paper describes a modified collection of usability heuristics that are designed to be appropriate for evaluation in mobile computing. They have been systematically derived from extensive literature and empirically validated. They therefore offer a sound basis for heuristic-based evaluation in mobile computing. Besides introducing the reader to the practical use of heuristic evaluation, the paper also closes with a description of potential future research in the area.

 

 


https://alandix.com/academic/papers/IJMHCI-2009-mobile-evaluation/

Alan Dix 16/7/2024