Procedures of User-Centered Usability Assessment for Digital Solutions: Scoping Review of Reviews Reporting on Digital Solutions Relevant for Older Adults

BackgroundThe assessment of usability is a complex process that involves several steps and procedures. It is important to standardize the evaluation and reporting of usability procedures across studies to guide researchers, facilitate comparisons across studies, and promote h...

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Main Authors: Silva, Anabela G, Caravau, Hilma, Martins, Ana, Almeida, Ana Margarida Pisco, Silva, Telmo, Ribeiro, Óscar, Santinha, Gonçalo, Rocha, Nelson P
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2021-01-01
Series:JMIR Human Factors
Online Access:http://humanfactors.jmir.org/2021/1/e22774/
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spelling doaj-976e2afb7ac44e17928e78d7c51466112021-05-03T01:42:38ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Human Factors2292-94952021-01-0181e2277410.2196/22774Procedures of User-Centered Usability Assessment for Digital Solutions: Scoping Review of Reviews Reporting on Digital Solutions Relevant for Older AdultsSilva, Anabela GCaravau, HilmaMartins, AnaAlmeida, Ana Margarida PiscoSilva, TelmoRibeiro, ÓscarSantinha, GonçaloRocha, Nelson P BackgroundThe assessment of usability is a complex process that involves several steps and procedures. It is important to standardize the evaluation and reporting of usability procedures across studies to guide researchers, facilitate comparisons across studies, and promote high-quality usability studies. The first step to standardizing is to have an overview of how usability study procedures are reported across the literature. ObjectiveThis scoping review of reviews aims to synthesize the procedures reported for the different steps of the process of conducting a user-centered usability assessment of digital solutions relevant for older adults and to identify potential gaps in the present reporting of procedures. The secondary aim is to identify any principles or frameworks guiding this assessment in view of a standardized approach. MethodsThis is a scoping review of reviews. A 5-stage scoping review methodology was used to identify and describe relevant literature published between 2009 and 2020 as follows: identify the research question, identify relevant studies, select studies for review, chart data from selected literature, and summarize and report results. The research was conducted on 5 electronic databases: PubMed, ACM Digital Library, IEEE, Scopus, and Web of Science. Reviews that met the inclusion criteria (reporting on user-centered usability evaluation procedures for any digital solution that could be relevant for older adults and were published in English) were identified, and data were extracted for further analysis regarding study evaluators, study participants, methods and techniques, tasks, and test environment. ResultsA total of 3958 articles were identified. After a detailed screening, 20 reviews matched the eligibility criteria. The characteristics of the study evaluators and participants and task procedures were only briefly and differently reported. The methods and techniques used for the assessment of usability are the topics that were most commonly and comprehensively reported in the reviews, whereas the test environment was seldom and poorly characterized. ConclusionsA lack of a detailed description of several steps of the process of assessing usability and no evidence on good practices of performing it suggests that there is a need for a consensus framework on the assessment of user-centered usability evaluation. Such a consensus would inform researchers and allow standardization of procedures, which are likely to result in improved study quality and reporting, increased sensitivity of the usability assessment, and improved comparability across studies and digital solutions. Our findings also highlight the need to investigate whether different ways of assessing usability are more sensitive than others. These findings need to be considered in light of review limitations.http://humanfactors.jmir.org/2021/1/e22774/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silva, Anabela G
Caravau, Hilma
Martins, Ana
Almeida, Ana Margarida Pisco
Silva, Telmo
Ribeiro, Óscar
Santinha, Gonçalo
Rocha, Nelson P
spellingShingle Silva, Anabela G
Caravau, Hilma
Martins, Ana
Almeida, Ana Margarida Pisco
Silva, Telmo
Ribeiro, Óscar
Santinha, Gonçalo
Rocha, Nelson P
Procedures of User-Centered Usability Assessment for Digital Solutions: Scoping Review of Reviews Reporting on Digital Solutions Relevant for Older Adults
JMIR Human Factors
author_facet Silva, Anabela G
Caravau, Hilma
Martins, Ana
Almeida, Ana Margarida Pisco
Silva, Telmo
Ribeiro, Óscar
Santinha, Gonçalo
Rocha, Nelson P
author_sort Silva, Anabela G
title Procedures of User-Centered Usability Assessment for Digital Solutions: Scoping Review of Reviews Reporting on Digital Solutions Relevant for Older Adults
title_short Procedures of User-Centered Usability Assessment for Digital Solutions: Scoping Review of Reviews Reporting on Digital Solutions Relevant for Older Adults
title_full Procedures of User-Centered Usability Assessment for Digital Solutions: Scoping Review of Reviews Reporting on Digital Solutions Relevant for Older Adults
title_fullStr Procedures of User-Centered Usability Assessment for Digital Solutions: Scoping Review of Reviews Reporting on Digital Solutions Relevant for Older Adults
title_full_unstemmed Procedures of User-Centered Usability Assessment for Digital Solutions: Scoping Review of Reviews Reporting on Digital Solutions Relevant for Older Adults
title_sort procedures of user-centered usability assessment for digital solutions: scoping review of reviews reporting on digital solutions relevant for older adults
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Human Factors
issn 2292-9495
publishDate 2021-01-01
description BackgroundThe assessment of usability is a complex process that involves several steps and procedures. It is important to standardize the evaluation and reporting of usability procedures across studies to guide researchers, facilitate comparisons across studies, and promote high-quality usability studies. The first step to standardizing is to have an overview of how usability study procedures are reported across the literature. ObjectiveThis scoping review of reviews aims to synthesize the procedures reported for the different steps of the process of conducting a user-centered usability assessment of digital solutions relevant for older adults and to identify potential gaps in the present reporting of procedures. The secondary aim is to identify any principles or frameworks guiding this assessment in view of a standardized approach. MethodsThis is a scoping review of reviews. A 5-stage scoping review methodology was used to identify and describe relevant literature published between 2009 and 2020 as follows: identify the research question, identify relevant studies, select studies for review, chart data from selected literature, and summarize and report results. The research was conducted on 5 electronic databases: PubMed, ACM Digital Library, IEEE, Scopus, and Web of Science. Reviews that met the inclusion criteria (reporting on user-centered usability evaluation procedures for any digital solution that could be relevant for older adults and were published in English) were identified, and data were extracted for further analysis regarding study evaluators, study participants, methods and techniques, tasks, and test environment. ResultsA total of 3958 articles were identified. After a detailed screening, 20 reviews matched the eligibility criteria. The characteristics of the study evaluators and participants and task procedures were only briefly and differently reported. The methods and techniques used for the assessment of usability are the topics that were most commonly and comprehensively reported in the reviews, whereas the test environment was seldom and poorly characterized. ConclusionsA lack of a detailed description of several steps of the process of assessing usability and no evidence on good practices of performing it suggests that there is a need for a consensus framework on the assessment of user-centered usability evaluation. Such a consensus would inform researchers and allow standardization of procedures, which are likely to result in improved study quality and reporting, increased sensitivity of the usability assessment, and improved comparability across studies and digital solutions. Our findings also highlight the need to investigate whether different ways of assessing usability are more sensitive than others. These findings need to be considered in light of review limitations.
url http://humanfactors.jmir.org/2021/1/e22774/
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