Investigating the influence of product representation formats in a user experience evaluation
Paper in proceeding, 2017

Knowledge is lacking on the choice and use of representations in a design process when seeking to investigate user experiences. Two types of representations (a storyboard and an interactive prototype) of the same system were employed in a user experience evaluation to investigate how different representation formats influence participants' responses to interactive systems. The interactive prototype gave rise to more design proposals as well as more personal reflections on experiences although with a focus on interface design details. The storyboard elicited more responses on the core ideas of the concept, but less grounded in reflections on personal use. The differences are attributed to how each representation managed to convey interactivity and context, resulting in differences in experienced agency. There is a need for further research, but with less focus on the type of system representation and more focus on how the content and affordances of system representations can be designed to elicit rich and personal reflections on user experience in early design phases.

Infotainment

User study

Prototyping

Representations

User experience

Storyboard

Author

Ingrid M Pettersson

Volvo Cars

Chalmers, Product and Production Development, Design and Human Factors

Dimitrios Gkouskos

Malmö university

MariAnne Karlsson

Chalmers, Product and Production Development, Design and Human Factors

11th International Conference on Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction; Lisbon; Portugal; 21 July 2017 through 23 July 2017

177-184

AUX - Automotive User Experience

VINNOVA (2012-03664), 2013-01-01 -- 2016-12-31.

Subject Categories

Human Computer Interaction

More information

Latest update

11/29/2018