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Modulbezeichnung (engl.):
Human Computer Interaction |
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Code: MAM.2.1.2.20 |
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4V (4 Semesterwochenstunden) |
5 |
Studiensemester: 1 |
Pflichtfach: nein |
Arbeitssprache:
Deutsch |
Prüfungsart:
Projektarbeit
[letzte Änderung 19.11.2009]
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KI636 Kommunikationsinformatik, Bachelor, ASPO 01.10.2014
, 5. Semester, Wahlpflichtfach, technisch
KIB-HCI (P221-0062) Kommunikationsinformatik, Bachelor, ASPO 01.10.2021
, 5. Semester, Wahlpflichtfach, technisch
KIB-HCI (P221-0062) Kommunikationsinformatik, Bachelor, ASPO 01.10.2022
, 5. Semester, Wahlpflichtfach, technisch
KI855 Kommunikationsinformatik, Master, ASPO 01.04.2016
, 2. Semester, Wahlpflichtfach, Modul inaktiv seit 30.09.2009
MAM.2.1.2.20 (P221-0062) Engineering und Management, Master, ASPO 01.10.2013
, 1. Semester, Wahlpflichtfach, Fachtechnik
PIBWI90 Praktische Informatik, Bachelor, ASPO 01.10.2011
, 5. Semester, Wahlpflichtfach, informatikspezifisch
PIB-HCI (P221-0062) Praktische Informatik, Bachelor, ASPO 01.10.2022
, 5. Semester, Wahlpflichtfach, informatikspezifisch
geeignet für Austauschstudenten mit learning agreement
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Die Präsenzzeit dieses Moduls umfasst bei 15 Semesterwochen 60 Veranstaltungsstunden (= 45 Zeitstunden). Der Gesamtumfang des Moduls beträgt bei 5 Creditpoints 150 Stunden (30 Std/ECTS). Daher stehen für die Vor- und Nachbereitung der Veranstaltung zusammen mit der Prüfungsvorbereitung 105 Stunden zur Verfügung.
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Empfohlene Voraussetzungen (Module):
Keine.
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Als Vorkenntnis empfohlen für Module:
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Modulverantwortung:
Prof. Steven Frysinger |
Dozent/innen: Prof. Steven Frysinger
[letzte Änderung 31.10.2013]
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Lernziele:
The students will be able to: - Discuss the cognitive characteristics of humans involved in computing and information systems; - Analyze information systems to assess their ability to meet the users’ needs; - Identify and characterize the users of a particular information system to be designed; - Gather and analyze needs assessment data from representative users of an information system; - Develop a Hierarchical Task Analysis of the users; - Develop both a conceptual design and a physical design of an information system; - Write a user requirements specification for the system; - Develop a test plan by which their system design could be submitted to summative evaluation upon implementation. Computer systems are embedded in virtually every aspect of our modern life, from the database systems that help us run our businesses down to the cellular telephones on which we have come to depend for daily personal communication. But developers of these tools frequently forget that the human being is part of the computer system, because essentially all of these systems depend on human interaction of some sort to produce the desired end result. In order to overcome this we must educate computer system developers about the nature of the human/computer interface (HCI) and give them tools with which to design and test effective interfaces in the systems which they develop. This course will (A) make the system developer aware of the human aspects of the system, including the peculiar cognitive and perceptual attributes of the human being; (B) provide the developer with design criteria and guidelines which will help to produce effective interactive computer systems; and (C) teach the developer how to quantitatively test the human/computer interface in a rigorous way
[letzte Änderung 23.11.2017]
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Inhalt:
1. Interactive Computer Systems, Human Factors Engineering, and the Software Engineering Lifecycle 2. Process of Interaction Design: User-centered Design 3. Needs Assessment and Requirements Specification 4. Conceptual Design 5. Physical Design: Graphical User Interfaces 6. Widget Design: When to use what 7. Test Phase: Evaluation 8. Understanding Users: Cognition, Sensation & Perception, Mental Models, and the "differently-abled" 9. Decision Support 10. Data Representation 11. Help and Documentation; Multimedia and the World Wide Web
[letzte Änderung 05.11.2007]
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Literatur:
Interaction Design (second edition). Jennifer Preece, Yvonne Rogers, Helen Sharp, John Wiley and Sons, 2007.
[letzte Änderung 05.11.2007]
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