Usability evaluation for geographic information systems: a systematic literature review

2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 645-665 ◽  
Author(s):  
René Unrau ◽  
Christian Kray
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 117967071881453
Author(s):  
Takashi Kuwayama ◽  
Kenji Hamabata ◽  
Toyomi Kamesaki ◽  
Soichi Koike ◽  
Kazuhiko Kotani

Given Japan’s super-ageing society and its need for developing community-based integrated care system, the role of home care nursing is becoming increasingly important. A central concern in home care nursing is regional/spatial placement of home nursing stations and accessibility for patients. Analysis based on geographic information systems (GIS) may be useful in home care nursing research. We conducted a literature review of home care nursing research based on GIS in Japan. A total of 4 articles were selected following a search of medical literature databases. The first report was published in 2014. Most subjects in the identified studies were older people. Most studies were implemented at a municipal level. Key themes in the identified studies were “placement of specialists and home nursing stations” and “placement of home nursing stations and target patients.” Despite the paucity of research, as all identified studies examined the community areas with an aged population, it may point to the need to consider community-based integrated care systems, including home care nursing, in Japan. More GIS-based research on home care nursing is called for.


Author(s):  
Vlasios Voudouris ◽  
Stephanie Larissa Marsh

This chapter introduces the relationships among geovisualization, human computer interaction (HCI), geographic information systems (GIS) and cartography as a means of supporting decision making. It emphasizes the importance of the data modelling and the associated visualizations in terms of what we can do by way of analysis and the methods by which we can undertake the analysis. It also argues that concepts from Usability Evaluation Methods (UEMs) and other HCI techniques offer a potentially more substantive approach to understanding the use of visualizations in collaborative decision making. Furthermore, the authors hope that understanding the underlying assumptions and relations among geovisualization, human computer interaction, geographic information systems and cartography will inform researchers and decision makers of a better design for studying geovisualization as enabling means of decision making.


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