A User Experience Design Process in Mobile Applications Prototypes: A Case Study

2021 ◽  
pp. 262-273
Author(s):  
Afonso Carvalhido ◽  
Rita Novo ◽  
Pedro Miguel Faria ◽  
Ana Curralo
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-60
Author(s):  
Isnan Nugraha ◽  
Agung Fatwanto

User Experience (UX) is a term that has received a lot of attention in the last decade. The number of industries whose consider the importance of implementing the UX design process within their development cycle has increased. Therefore, we think it is  important to investigate how UX design processes are implemented in the industries. In this research, we take a qualitative approach with descriptive methods by investigating six information technology companies in Indonesia. As a result, we found that most of these information technology companies implement the UX design process as part of their operation and consider that the UX design process is an important part of software development. Each company has its order and priorities in regard to the UX design processes and only follows their established UX design process framework in order to meet their product development requirements. We also found that there are different UX design process approaches from these six companies.


Author(s):  
Bruno Giesteira ◽  
Joana Silva ◽  
Teresa Sarmento ◽  
Paulo Abreu ◽  
Maria Teresa Restivo

Developed within the scope of a SciTech research project, this chapter records in a procedural way the design centred on senior users for a set of three serious games for the eHealth field, designated by the authors as “Carnival.” The chapter, having as its leitmotif the project aforementioned, looking at its motivation, breaks down the systems augmented feedback interfaces—BodyGrip and SHaRe—to evaluate, rehabilitate, and monitor dexterity and manual strength. Topics related to empathy and well-being in the user experience design process, namely guidelines for empathy in different project phases, participatory design, inclusiveness, and amusement are identified. Withal listed the development phases of three games dynamics inherent to the “Carnival” set —“High Striker,” “Claw Machine,” “HotDog Sauce”—punctuating with the discussion and contributions to the e-health area describing its potential for Evaluate, rehabilitate, and monitor dexterity and manual strength.


2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (10) ◽  
pp. 9461-9464 ◽  
Author(s):  
JungAe Lee ◽  
JeanHun Chung

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 43
Author(s):  
Anne Elisabeth Krueger ◽  
Kathrin Pollmann ◽  
Nora Fronemann ◽  
Beatrice Foucault

Many companies are facing the task for radical innovations—totally new concepts and ideas for products and services, which are successful at the market. One major factor for success is a positive user experience. Thus, design teams need, and are challenged to integrate, an experience-centered perspective in their human-centered design processes. To support this, we propose adjusted versions of the well-established user research methods focus groups and cultural probes, in order to tailor them to the specific needs and focus of experience-based design, especially in the context of solving “wicked design problems”. The results are experience focus groups and experience probes, which augment the traditional methods with new structuring, materials, and tasks based on the three principles experience focus, creative visualization, and systematic guidance. We introduce and describe a two step-approach for applying these methods, as well as a case study that was conducted in cooperation with a company that illustrates how the methods can be applied to enable an experience-centered perspective on the topic of “families and digital life”. The case study demonstrates how the methods address the three principles they are based on. Post-study interviews with representatives of the company revealed valuable insights about their usefulness for practical user experience design.


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