User interface evaluation of interactive TV: a media studies perspective
A diverse user population employs interactive TV (ITV) applications in a leisure context for entertainment
purposes. The traditional user interface (UI) evaluation paradigm involving efficiency and task completion may not be adequate
for the assessment of such applications. In this paper, we argue that unless ITV applications are evaluated with consideration
for the ordinary TV viewer, they are going to be appropriate only for the computer literate user, thus excluding the TV
audience from easy access to information society services. The field of media studies has accumulated an extensive theory of TV
and associated methods. We applied the corresponding findings in the domain of ITV to examine how universal access to ITV
applications can be obtained. By combining these results with emerging affective quality theories for interactive products, we
propose a UI evaluation framework for ITV applications.
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DOI
Chorianopoulos, K. and Spinellis, D. 2006. User interface evaluation of interactive TV: a media studies perspective. Universal Access in the Information Society 5, 2, 209–218.BibTeX
Chorianopoulos, K. and Spinellis, D. 2006. User interface evaluation of interactive TV: a media studies perspective. Universal Access in the Information Society 5, 2, 209–218.