BS EN ISO 9241-110:2020
$167.15
Ergonomics of human-system interaction – Interaction principles
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2020 | 42 |
This document describes principles for interaction between a user and a system that are formulated in general terms (i.e. independent of situations of use, application, environment or technology). This document provides a framework for applying those interaction principles and the general design recommendations for interactive systems.
While this document is applicable to all types of interactive systems, it does not cover the specifics of every application domain (e.g. safety critical systems, collaborative work, artificial intelligence features).
It is intended for the following audiences:
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analysts of requirements (including market requirements, user requirements, and system requirements);
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designers of user interface development tools and style guides to be used by user interface designers and developers;
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designers of user interfaces who will apply the guidance during the design activities (either directly, based on training, or by using tools and style guides which incorporate the guidance);
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developers who will apply the guidance during the development process;
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evaluators who are responsible for ensuring that products meet the general design recommendations contained in this document;
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buyers who will reference this document in contracts during product procurement.
This document focuses on interaction principles related to the design of interactions between user and interactive system. ISO 9241-112 provides further guidance on the presentation of information.
This document does not consider any other aspect of design such as marketing, aesthetics and corporate identity.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
2 | National foreword |
4 | European foreword |
6 | Foreword |
7 | Introduction |
9 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Terms and definitions |
12 | 4 Interaction principles 4.1 Overview |
13 | 4.2 Coverage of this set of interaction principles and general design recommendations |
14 | 4.3 Use of the interaction principles in human-centred design 4.4 Contribution of the interaction principles to usability 4.5 Relationships between interaction principles |
15 | 4.6 Framework for using this document |
17 | 5 Principles and recommendations 5.1 Suitability for the user’s tasks 5.1.1 Principle 5.1.2 Recommendations related to identifying suitability of the interactive system for a given task 5.1.3 Recommendations related to optimizing effort in task accomplishment |
18 | 5.1.4 Recommendations related to defaults supporting the task 5.2 Self-descriptiveness 5.2.1 Principle 5.2.2 Recommendations related to presence and obviousness of the information |
19 | 5.2.3 Recommendations related to clear indication of processing status |
20 | 5.3 Conformity with user expectations 5.3.1 Principle 5.3.2 Recommendations related to appropriate system behaviour and responses |
21 | 5.3.3 Recommendations related to consistency (internal and external) |
22 | 5.3.4 Recommendations related to changes in the context of use 5.4 Learnability 5.4.1 Principle |
23 | 5.4.2 Recommendations related to discovery 5.4.3 Recommendations related to exploration 5.4.4 Recommendations related to retention |
24 | 5.5 Controllability 5.5.1 Principle 5.5.2 Recommendations related to interruption by the user |
25 | 5.5.3 Recommendations related to flexibility 5.5.4 Recommendations related to individualization |
26 | 5.6 Use error robustness 5.6.1 Principle 5.6.2 Recommendations related to use error avoidance |
27 | 5.6.3 Recommendations related to use error tolerance |
28 | 5.6.4 Recommendations related to use error recovery |
29 | 5.7 User engagement 5.7.1 Principle 5.7.2 Recommendations related to motivating the user to use the system |
30 | 5.7.3 Recommendations related to trustworthiness of the system |
31 | 5.7.4 Recommendations related to increasing user involvement with the system |