HumanCentered Software Engineering: Software Engineering Models, Patterns and Architectures for HCI (HumanComputer Interaction,Used

HumanCentered Software Engineering: Software Engineering Models, Patterns and Architectures for HCI (HumanComputer Interaction,Used

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SKU: DADAX1849968039
Brand: Springer
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Activity theory is a way of describing and characterizing the structure of human tivity of all kinds. First introduced by Russian psychologists Rubinshtein, Leontiev, and Vigotsky in the early part of the last century, activity theory has more recently gained increasing attention among interaction designers and others in the hum computer interaction and usability communities (see, for example, Gay and H brooke, 2004). Interest was given a signi?cant boost when Donald Norman suggested activitytheory and activitycentered design as antidotes to some of the putative ills of humancentered design (Norman, 2005). Norman, who has been credited with coining the phrase usercentered design, suggested that too much attention focused on human users may be harmful, that to design better tools designers need to focus not so much on users as on the activities in which users are engaged and the tasks they seek to perform within those activities. Although many researchers and practitioners claim to have used or been in?uenced by activity theory in their work (see, for example, Nardi, 1996), it is often dif?cult to trace precisely where or how the results have actually been shaped by activity theory. Inmanycases, evendetailedcasestudiesreportresultsthatseemonlydistantlyrelated, if at all, to the use of activity theory. Contributing to the lack of precise and traceable impact is that activity theory, spite its name, is not truly a formal and proper theory.

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