Usability in Government Systems
Morgan Kaufmann Publishers In (Verlag)
978-0-12-391063-9 (ISBN)
As a usability specialist or interaction designer working with the government, or as a government or contractor professional involved in specifying, procuring, or managing system development, you need this book. Editors Elizabeth Buie and Dianne Murray have brought together over 30 experts to outline practical advice to both usability specialists and government technology professionals and managers.
Working with internal and external government systems is a unique and difficult task because of of the sheer magnitude of the audience for external systems (the entire population of a country, and sometimes more), and because of the need to achieve government transparency while protecting citizens’ privacy.. Open government, plain language, accessibility, biometrics, service design, internal vs. external systems, and cross-cultural issues, as well as working with the government, are all covered in this book.
Elizabeth Buie has 35 years of experience in information systems, of which over 30 have involved user interfaces, usability, and the user experience. Approximately 90% of her work has involved government systems of one sort or another, both internal and public facing. She has performed research, analysis, specification, design, development, and evaluation of human-computer interaction (HCI) for Web sites, Web applications, desktop and mainframe applications, and complex systems such as spacecraft control centres and air-traffic control applications. Her experience has also included several years in system engineering, which includes the specification and analysis of system and software requirements and the integration of the HCI process into the system life cycle. In the mid-1990s, Elizabeth initiated the effort to promote awareness of HCI in government systems. She co-chaired a workshop at CHI’95 and a SIG at CHI’96 and was one of the organizers of three symposia at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) on HCI in government. Elizabeth has master's degrees in mathematics and in human development, extensive technical and nontechnical writing experience, and proficiency in the Italian language. She serves on the editorial board of the UPA's online Journal of Usability Studies and served for several years on the editorial board of ACM’s magazine. She is co-chair (with Jhilmil Jain) of the User Experience Community for the CHI 2011 conference and is an Assistant Chair of the Usability, Accessibility, and User Experience subcommittee of the CHI2011 Program Committee. Dianne Murray has a joint degree in Computer Science and Psychology and has been involved in the Human Computer Interaction field since 1979, when she met MICKIE, the Medical Interviewing Computer (later to be exhibited at the Science Museum, London) in a doctor's surgery. Her first career was as a research scientist in a renowned UK government research laboratory. Her second career was as a university lecturer in the London area and her third as a Senior Research Fellow in a multidisciplinary research group in a 5*-rated University department. She has extensive experience of teaching Human Computer Interaction at both undergraduate and postgraduate level in a number of prestigious institutions and, since 1997, has been responsible for the HCI component of a University of London External Degree Programme, re-writing and updating the Study Guide some three times over the years. Her fourth career as a Usability and HCI consultant and her fifth as an academic journal editor have taken place in parallel. She has been continually involved in writing, researching and editing - academic papers, textbooks, technical reports and general audience articles on her specialist research subjects. She has extensive experience of acting as an editor for collected books of readings and conference publications and of producing material associated with specialist conferences. Her earliest experience was in producing computer-based training material and writing technical manuals for the MICROTEXT system (Acorn Publications, 1985). More recently she has produced reports and deliverables on technical matters for European Community-funded research projects, and gained much experience in managing, writing and submitting proposals for research funding, and acting as an expert Evaluator and Technical Rapporteur for the European Framework programmes of research. A founder member of interaction (originally the British HCI Group), she was the first Editor of its Newsletter (later the magazine, Interfaces) and has been General Editor of the international and interdisciplinary journal, Interacting with Computers, published by Elsevier Science, for 11 years, being Deputy Editor and co-founder for 10 years prior to that. Since the birth of her twin sons she has worked both as a part-time HCI and Usability consultant and as sub-contractor to her partner, Neil Sandford, at Putting People Before Computers. Now that her youngest children are at secondary school she intends to pursue her original research into adaptive interfaces and intelligent systems and to restart her interrupted doctorate in Human Computer Interaction.
Introduction
Chapter 1: A Brief History of User Experience in Government Systems
PART I: Public-facing Systems
Introduction
Chapter 2: Usability of Public Web Sites
Chapter 3: Usability and Government 2.0
Chapter 4: UX of Transactions
Chapter 5: Privacy and the Citizen
PART II: Internal Systems
Introduction
Chapter 6: Usability in Defense Systems
Chapter 7: Emergency Response in Simulated Terrorist Attacks
Chapter 8: National Critical Infrastructures
Chapter 9: Legislative Drafting Systems
PART III: UX Issues Common to Both Public and Internal Systems
Introduction
Chapter 10: Content Strategy
Chapter 11: Plain Language in Government
Chapter 12: Ensuring Accessibility for People with Disabilities
Chapter 13: Mobile Access
Chapter 14: User Issues in Security
Chapter 15: Usability of Biometric Systems
PART IV: Procurement and Development
Introduction
Chapter 16: Getting UX into the Contract
Chapter 17: ISO Standards for User-Centered Design and the Specification of Usability
Chapter 18: User-centered Requirements Definition
Chapter 19: Models as Representations for Supporting the
Development of e-Procedures
Chapter 20: Evaluation in Government Environments
Chapter 21: Adapting e-Gov Usability Evaluation to Cultural Contexts
PART V: Wider Considerations
Introduction
Chapter 22: Design for Policymaking
Chapter 23: Service Design and Channel Shifting
Chapter 24: UX and e-Democracy in Asia
Closing Thoughts
Resources, Glossary & Acronyms
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 5.7.2012 |
---|---|
Verlagsort | San Francisco |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 191 x 235 mm |
Gewicht | 770 g |
Themenwelt | Informatik ► Software Entwicklung ► User Interfaces (HCI) |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Politik / Verwaltung ► Staat / Verwaltung | |
ISBN-10 | 0-12-391063-3 / 0123910633 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-12-391063-9 / 9780123910639 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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