Human-Centered Design to Enhance the Usability, Human Factors, and User Experience Within Digital Destructive Ecosystems

Author(s):  
Heru Susanto ◽  
Fahmi Ibrahim ◽  
Saleem Haja Nazmudeen ◽  
Fadzliwati Mohiddin ◽  
Desi Setiana

Human-centered design is an approach that focuses on involving the end user throughout the product development and testing process which can be crucial in ensuring that the product meets the needs and capabilities of the user, particularly in terms of user experience and safety. The structured and iterative nature of human-centered design can often be a challenge for the design team when faced with the necessary, rapid, product development life cycles associated with the competitiveness in the industry. This ensures that the needs of the user are taken into account throughout the design process whilst also maintaining a rapid pace of development, and its rationale before outlining how it was applied to assess and enhance the usability, human factors, and user experience within destructive digital ecosystem era. The authors encouraged a system approach such as human-centered design for prevention on further damages being done on data breaches through the application of each steps of the process.

2011 ◽  
Vol 55-57 ◽  
pp. 262-267
Author(s):  
Si Yuan Cheng ◽  
Jun Hua Liu ◽  
Xiang Wei Zhang

As product varieties increase and life cycles shorten, the need for rapid product development becomes critical to maintain competitiveness in the market. Reverse engineering technology enables us to quickly create the CAD model of product. Rapid prototyping is another technology that can shorten the product development time by fabricating the physical prototype of a part using layered manufacturing technique. And how to integrate these two technologies to facilitate rapid product development is an important issue. Haptic modeling has the advantages of allowing the user to touch, feel, manipulate, and model point cloud in a 3D environment that is similar to a natural setting. A high-quality STL file can be obtained from the haptic modeling system which is ideal for rapid prototyping. In this paper, a novel method of integrating RE/RP for rapid product development based on haptic modeling is presented, which can increase the efficiency for RE/RP integration and promote product innovative design. Case study is also given to demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed method.


2021 ◽  
pp. 193229682110587
Author(s):  
Thomas Sparre ◽  
Niels-Aage B. Hansen ◽  
Anya Sonia Wernersson ◽  
Mark Guarraia

The goal of human-centered insulin pen design is to relieve the treatment burden of a chronic condition and help affected individuals to feel free of disease. The patient as well as their entire ecosystem should be considered. At Novo Nordisk A/S, we believe that embedding human-centered design at the heart of our development processes is best achieved with multidisciplinary experts in-house to work alongside product development teams and, importantly, the end user. Novo Nordisk introduced the first commercially available insulin pen in 1985 and has continued to develop reusable/durable and prefilled insulin pens to meet different patient needs, through to the latest NovoPen 6 and NovoPen Echo Plus with SMART technology. Human-centered design is essential for delivering meaningful and practical solutions for individuals with diabetes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. e8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Harte ◽  
Liam Glynn ◽  
Alejandro Rodríguez-Molinero ◽  
Paul MA Baker ◽  
Thomas Scharf ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 93 (6) ◽  
pp. AB187
Author(s):  
Stefan Van Langendonck ◽  
Pieter Corens ◽  
Elisabeth Stragier ◽  
Erik Vanderstraeten ◽  
Walgraeve Daan ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Rochelle Edwards ◽  
Bridget Huber ◽  
Olga Kramarova

Five observations on human factors and ergonomics are compared to user experience (UX) research. This paper highlights similarities and differences to the original reflections made by Salas (2008) and goes deeper into where user experience research as a field has room to grow, particularly, by maintaining a closer connection to its roots in psychology and human factors. This is important as applied user experience researchers work to make an impact and grow their careers through credibility and rigor of work. User experience researchers of varying tenure and those considering entering the field may benefit from reflecting on where they find such patterns in their own roles and what solutions should be proposed (whether internalized, institutional, or systemic).


Author(s):  
Karl-H. Grote ◽  
Christiane Beyer

Abstract In socialistic countries, customer satisfaction and the market conditions were not of high priority: Some selected parts of the market products were of satisfactory costs and quality to customers. Quality and costs of a product decide on its success in the world-wide market. The wishes and expectations of the customer for a high-quality and low-priced product continue to grow, however, with the desire for faster availability of this product. The customer determines also the delivery time and other competitive factors as the durability of the product. At present the trend goes towards shorter product life cycles, which in turn requires reduced time spent on the product development. With these complex market requirements and growing diversity of the products the engineer faces new challenges in his development tasks. It can be paraphrased as follows: In reduced lifecycles a quality-assured and advantageous product has to be developed despite increasing complexity of the design and demands for reduction of material used, manpower and monetary spending. For the solution of this complex problem the following suggestions are tested and implemented: • Structured design process for the development process, • Simultaneous work where ever possible during the development stages, • Employment of modern resources for the product development, • Use of information technology and • Implementation of rapid prototyping for models and in secondary manufacturing processes. An important research field at the Department of Mechanical Engineering Design at the Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg is research and further development of productive procedures and tools for the realization of a computer integrated product development process. This process includes the effective application of technologies to produce the prototypes for presentation, producibility analysis and production. Of particular interest is the closed process chain (loop) from Solid Modeling via Rapid Prototyping and 3D-Digitizing where the entry point of this process chain depends on the needs of the application or particular interest of the innovating company. Information for faster and more competitive preparation, verification and Re-Engineering of existing and established products, which have to be adjusted to the world-market needs, will be made available. The results of this applied research offer opportunities to display new developed products for the lagging industries in the former East Germany, and furthermore arranging for necessary venture capital to produce the product, to gain information about possible suppliers and manufacturing opportunities in order to minimize the investors’ risks of an enterprise.


Author(s):  
Jason J. Saleem ◽  
Kyle Maddox ◽  
Jennifer Herout ◽  
Kurt Ruark

This practice-oriented paper presents a human-centered design (HCD) framework that we developed to perform a comprehensive evaluation of a new health information technology (HIT) system under development, intended to replace a legacy system. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Veteran Crisis Line (VCL) program provides a vital service in crisis intervention and suicide prevention. VCL staff rely on a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) legacy system, Medora. VCL intended to replace Medora with Microsoft Dynamics 365 (D365) CRM system. Due to wide-spread criticism of D365, the VA Human Factors Engineering (HFE) team engaged in a multi-study, mixed-method HCD evaluation to investigate the legacy system and intended replacement in terms of ability to support VCL staff needs. The HCD framework we developed to perform this evaluation may be adapted for other large-scale HIT transitions and may provide human factors practitioners with guidance to make evidence-based decisions to support (or abandon) such transitions.


Author(s):  
Richard J. Holden ◽  
Jordan R. Hill ◽  
Noll L. Campbell ◽  
Yan Xiao ◽  
Ayse P. Gurses ◽  
...  

Deprescribing is the process of withdrawing or replacing medications to improve outcomes and reduce medication-associated risks. Deprescribing, though traditionally the domain of healthcare professionals, is now receiving attention from human factors experts. In turn, the deprescribing community is gaining an appreciation for human-centered design and research. This panel gathers experts in human factors and pharmacy to critically discuss past, current, and future work concerning human-centered design and research in deprescribing. The panel will help formulate the value proposition for human factors in this important area.


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