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  4. The Human-centredness metric : early assessment of the quality of human-centred design activities
 
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The Human-centredness metric : early assessment of the quality of human-centred design activities

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.8808
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2023-11-06
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Sankowski, Olga  
Produktentwicklung und Konstruktionstechnik M-17  
Krause, Dieter  orcid-logo
Produktentwicklung und Konstruktionstechnik M-17  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.8808
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/44126
Journal
Applied Sciences (Basel)  
Volume
13
Issue
21
Article Number
12090
Citation
Applied Sciences 13 (21): 12090 (2023)
Publisher DOI
10.3390/app132112090
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85192353521
Publisher
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
Peer Reviewed
true
Human-centred design as a research field is characterised by multidisciplinarity and a variety of many similar methods. Previous research attempted to classify existing methods into groups and categories, e.g., according to the degree of user involvement. The research question here is the following: How can human-centredness be measured and evaluated based on resulting product concepts? The goal of the paper is to present and apply a new metric—the Human-Centredness Metric (HCM)—for the early estimation of the quality of any human-centred activity based on the four goals of human-centred design. HCM was employed to evaluate 16 concepts, utilising a 4-point Likert scale, covering four different everyday products that were created by four students, which used three different human-centred design methods for this. The first concept was created without the application of any additional human-centred design method. The results illuminated trends regarding the impact of additional human-centred design methods on the HCM score. However, statistical significance remained elusive, potentially due to a series of limitations such as concept complexity, the small number of concepts, and the early developmental stage. The study’s limitations underscore the need for refined items and expanded samples to better gauge the impact of human-centred methods on product development.
Subjects
design methodology
experiment
human-centred design
metric
user-centred design
DDC Class
670: Manufacturing
Funding(s)
Open-Access-Publikationskosten / 2022-2024 / Technische Universität Hamburg (TUHH)  
Publication version
publishedVersion
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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