User:Xexeo/Books/Human Computar Interaction
Appearance
The Wikimedia Foundation's book rendering service has been withdrawn. Please upload your Wikipedia book to one of the external rendering services. |
You can still create and edit a book design using the Book Creator and upload it to an external rendering service:
|
This user book is a user-generated collection of Wikipedia articles that can be easily saved, rendered electronically, and ordered as a printed book. If you are the creator of this book and need help, see Help:Books (general tips) and WikiProject Wikipedia-Books (questions and assistance). Edit this book: Book Creator · Wikitext Order a printed copy from: PediaPress [ About ] [ Advanced ] [ FAQ ] [ Feedback ] [ Help ] [ WikiProject ] [ Recent Changes ] |
Human Computar Interaction
[edit]Task Model
[edit]- Introduction
- User interface
- Human–computer interaction
- Human-centered computing
- Human-centred system
- Human reliability
- Computer user satisfaction
- Human factors and ergonomics
- Outline of ergonomics
- End-user
- Information
- Cognition & Psicology
- Action research
- Human processor model
- Cognitive ergonomics
- Cognitive complexity
- Activity-centered design
- Aesthetics
- Safety
- Cognitive walkthrough
- Comfort
- Chunking (psychology)
- Applied behavior analysis
- Mental model
- Learning curve
- Experience
- Design Techniques
- Design
- Participatory design
- Design thinking
- Interaction design
- Empathic design
- Needs analysis
- Contextual design
- User analysis
- User interface design
- Use case
- User-centered design
- Topics
- Contextual inquiry
- Direct Instruction
- Job analysis
- Kansei engineering
- Maynard Operation Sequence Technique
- Methods-time measurement
- Performance management
- Persona (user experience)
- Predetermined motion time system
- Presentation program
- Programmed instruction
- Correlacionados
- Business process mapping
- Requirements analysis
- Systems analysis
- Evaluation
- Software testing
- Component-based usability testing
- Comparison of usability evaluation methods
- Retrospective think aloud
- Software inspection
- Partial concurrent thinking aloud
- Heuristic evaluation
- Usability testing
- Work sampling
- Meta-analysis
- Pluralistic walkthrough
- Protocol analysis
- Usability inspection
- Focus group
- Think aloud protocol
- Task Analysis
- Task analysis
- GOMS
- CMN-GOMS
- CPM-GOMS
- NGOMSL
- Keystroke-level model
- Fitts's law
- Steering law
- Prototypes
- Iterative design
- Paper prototyping
- Cardboard modeling
- Prototype
- Website wireframe
- Proof of concept
- Storyboard
- Software prototyping
- List of human–computer interaction topics
- Wizard of Oz experiment
- Mockup
- Rapid prototyping
- Interview
- Interaction technique
- Point and click
- Pointing device gesture
- Computer keyboard
- Button (computing)
- Hands-free computing
- Input device
- Game controller
- Paddle (game controller)
- Gamepad
- Digital camera
- Pointer (graphical user interfaces)
- Scenario (computing)
- Desktop environment
- Web design
- Mouse (computing)
- Activity theory
- CREAM
- ConcurTaskTrees
- Principles of user interface design
- Usability lab
- Drag and drop
- Window manager
- Human–computer information retrieval
- User experience design
- Bodystorming
- Brainstorming
- Pictive
- Hick's law
- Ethnography
- Context menu
- Command (computing)
- Business object
- Pen computing
- Handwriting recognition
- Tangible user interface
- Interface metaphor
- Affordance
- Information visualization
- Gulf of evaluation
- Accessibility
- Adaptive autonomy
- Banner blindness
- Gender HCI
- Gulf of execution
- Habituation
- Human action cycle
- Principle of least astonishment
- Computer accessibility
- Usability
- Usability engineering
- Progressive disclosure
- Sonic interaction design
- Attentive user interface
- Object-oriented user interface
- Natural language user interface
- Information overload
- Assistive technology
- Devices & Interfaces
- Graphical user interface elements
- Archy
- Chorded keyboard
- Wii Remote
- Pointing device
- Zooming user interface
- Crossing-based interface
- Joystick
- Keyer
- IBM LPFK
- Cut, copy, and paste
- Computer icon
- Kinect
- Brushing and linking
- Command-line interface
- Pointing stick
- Multiple document interface
- GUI widget
- Modality (human–computer interaction)
- Pie menu
- Usage-centered design
- Graphical user interface
- Model of hierarchical complexity
- WIMP (computing)
- Single document interface
- Tab (GUI)
- Alpha compositing
- 10-foot user interface
- Gesture recognition
- Pixel
- WYSIWYG
- Command prompt
- Post-WIMP
- Touch user interface
- Switch access
- Web hosting control panel
- History of the graphical user interface
- Transparency (human–computer interaction)
- Virtual artifact
- Look and feel
- Physiological interaction
- Kinetic user interface
- Human interface device
- Natural user interface
- Mode (computer interface)
- User assistance
- Desktop metaphor
- Task-focused interface
- Touchscreen
- Output device
- Stylus
- Virtual user interface