Title
Designing time at the user interface
Abstract
This paper describes research that seeks to facilitate the capture, representation, and reasoning about, temporal information by usability engineers. The product, a method we call KAT-LITTER, is an extension of Johnson and Johnson's (1991) Knowledge Analysis of Tasks (KAT). An evaluation of KAT-LITTER showed that it influenced the design process in two significant ways: firstly, designers using KAT-LITTER spent more time reasoning about temporal issues than designers using KAT alone, and secondly these same designers considered a broader spectrum of temporal issues. Further developments of KAT-LITTER are briefly discussed.
Year
DOI
Venue
2000
10.1080/014492900750052705
BEHAVIOUR & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Keywords
Field
DocType
design process,usability engineering,user interface,spectrum
Systems engineering,Computer science,Usability,Knowledge management,Systems design,Human–computer interaction,Engineering design process,User interface
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
19
6
0144-929X
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
2
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
John Fabre100.34
Steve Howard2105786.65
Ross Smith300.68