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Designing interactive systems : people, activities, contexts, technologies

Benyon, David; Turner, Phil; Turner, Susan

Authors

David Benyon

Phil Turner

Susan Turner



Abstract

Authoritative in its coverage, the book draws on the authors’ extensive experience in research and teaching. A self-contained introduction to the area is followed by a systematic discussion of the influence of human psychology on the design of interactive systems, illustrated by many real-world examples. Next, a practical, scenario-based design method and techniques are presented. Later sections treat hot topics such as affective computing, social navigation and computer-supported cooperative work. A range of current methods, including contextual design and the latest thinking in evaluation, are treated in detail. These more advanced, research-led chapters encourage the reader to reflect critically on the domain as a whole.

The book explores this continually developing discipline by bringing together the most useful aspects of established practice with newer perspectives. The approach recognizes that we have gone beyond computers in the workplace and are concerned with designing engaging interactions between people and a wide range of devices, products and systems

Citation

Benyon, D., Turner, P., & Turner, S. (2005). Designing interactive systems : people, activities, contexts, technologies. Pearson Education

Book Type Authored Book
Publication Date 2005
Deposit Date May 11, 2010
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Book Title Designing Interactive Systems
ISBN 9780321116291
Keywords Human-Computer Interaction; interaction design; ubiquitous computing; information appliances; social navigation; computer-supported cooperative work;
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/3357