Participatory Prototyping to Inform the Development of a Remote UX Design System in the Automotive Domain

This study reports on the empirical findings of participatory design workshops for the development of a supportive automotive user experience design system. Identifying and addressing this area with traditional research methods is problematic due to the different user experience (UX) design perspect...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stavros Tasoudis, Mark Perry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2414-4088/2/4/74
id doaj-8759e3d2ee8f48d18e61f27186f3aa52
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8759e3d2ee8f48d18e61f27186f3aa522020-11-24T21:44:30ZengMDPI AGMultimodal Technologies and Interaction2414-40882018-10-01247410.3390/mti2040074mti2040074Participatory Prototyping to Inform the Development of a Remote UX Design System in the Automotive DomainStavros Tasoudis0Mark Perry1Department of Computer Science, Wilfred Brown Building, Brunel University London, Uxbridge, Middlesex UB8 3PH, UKDepartment of Computer Science, Wilfred Brown Building, Brunel University London, Uxbridge, Middlesex UB8 3PH, UKThis study reports on the empirical findings of participatory design workshops for the development of a supportive automotive user experience design system. Identifying and addressing this area with traditional research methods is problematic due to the different user experience (UX) design perspectives that might conflict and the related limitations of the automotive domain. To help resolve this problem, we conducted research with 12 user experience (UX) designers through individual participatory prototyping activities to gain insights into their explicit, observable, tacit and latent needs. These activities allowed us to explore their motivation to use different technologies; the system’s architecture; detailed features of interactivity; and to describe user needs including efficiency, effectiveness, engagement, naturalness, ease of use, information retrieval, self-image awareness, politeness, and flexibility. Our analysis led us to design implications that translate participants’ needs into UX design goals, informing practitioners on how to develop relevant systems further.https://www.mdpi.com/2414-4088/2/4/74user experienceremote UXparticipatory designco-creationprototypingautomotive user interfacesautonomous vehiclesautomotive
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stavros Tasoudis
Mark Perry
spellingShingle Stavros Tasoudis
Mark Perry
Participatory Prototyping to Inform the Development of a Remote UX Design System in the Automotive Domain
Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
user experience
remote UX
participatory design
co-creation
prototyping
automotive user interfaces
autonomous vehicles
automotive
author_facet Stavros Tasoudis
Mark Perry
author_sort Stavros Tasoudis
title Participatory Prototyping to Inform the Development of a Remote UX Design System in the Automotive Domain
title_short Participatory Prototyping to Inform the Development of a Remote UX Design System in the Automotive Domain
title_full Participatory Prototyping to Inform the Development of a Remote UX Design System in the Automotive Domain
title_fullStr Participatory Prototyping to Inform the Development of a Remote UX Design System in the Automotive Domain
title_full_unstemmed Participatory Prototyping to Inform the Development of a Remote UX Design System in the Automotive Domain
title_sort participatory prototyping to inform the development of a remote ux design system in the automotive domain
publisher MDPI AG
series Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
issn 2414-4088
publishDate 2018-10-01
description This study reports on the empirical findings of participatory design workshops for the development of a supportive automotive user experience design system. Identifying and addressing this area with traditional research methods is problematic due to the different user experience (UX) design perspectives that might conflict and the related limitations of the automotive domain. To help resolve this problem, we conducted research with 12 user experience (UX) designers through individual participatory prototyping activities to gain insights into their explicit, observable, tacit and latent needs. These activities allowed us to explore their motivation to use different technologies; the system’s architecture; detailed features of interactivity; and to describe user needs including efficiency, effectiveness, engagement, naturalness, ease of use, information retrieval, self-image awareness, politeness, and flexibility. Our analysis led us to design implications that translate participants’ needs into UX design goals, informing practitioners on how to develop relevant systems further.
topic user experience
remote UX
participatory design
co-creation
prototyping
automotive user interfaces
autonomous vehicles
automotive
url https://www.mdpi.com/2414-4088/2/4/74
work_keys_str_mv AT stavrostasoudis participatoryprototypingtoinformthedevelopmentofaremoteuxdesignsystemintheautomotivedomain
AT markperry participatoryprototypingtoinformthedevelopmentofaremoteuxdesignsystemintheautomotivedomain
_version_ 1725909815155228672