HCI/E(U) Approach

3.3 HCI/E(U) Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge 150 150 John

3.3 HCI/E(U) Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge

The HCI/E(U) Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge presupposes an associated HCI Engineering Discipline, comprising: HCI engineering knowledge, which distinguishes the interactive system of user and computer, the work it performs and the effectiveness of that performance, in terms of task quality and system resource costs. This HCI design knowledge supports HCI practices seeking to diagnose design problems and to prescribe design solutions to those problems. (C18)

The EU Conception of the HCI Engineering design problem is informally expressed as: to design human interactions with computers for effective working. The EU Conception, then, is unequivocally one of design knowledge. HCI Engineering knowledge, following the EU Conception, is the product of research. Such knowledge is public and ultimately formal. It may assume a number of forms, for example, codified, proceduralised, formal etc, as in theories, principles etc. It may be maintained in a number of ways, for example, it may be expressed in journals, learning systems, procedures, tools etc. HCI Engineering knowledge is, therefore, a necessary characteristic of the EU HCI Engineering Discipline. (C3)

The discipline of HCI Engineering, aims, following the EU Conception, (in the longer term (F1)) to solve its general problem of design by the specification of designs before their implementation – as in ‘specify then implement’ design practices. (C12) (C19) The latter is made possible by the prescriptive nature of the knowledge supporting such practices – knowledge formulated as HCI Engineering principles. (C21)

However, a pre-requisite for the formulation of any HCI Engineering principles is a Conception. The EU Conception is a unitary view of the HCI Engineering design problem; its power lies in the coherence and completeness of its definition of the concepts, which can express that problem. (C17) Engineering principles are articulated in terms of those self-same concepts. The latter include: user; computer; interaction; work; work domain; worksystem; effectiveness; performance; task quality; system resource costs etc (see 2.5 for a complete presentation of the EU design problem concepts, which would be recruited to the formulation of EU-conceived engineering principles. (C16) (C17) (F2)

Thus, the EU Conception of HCI Engineering principles assumes the possibility of a codified, general, and testable formulation of HCI Engineering discipline knowledge. The latter might be prescriptively applied to designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. Such principles would be unequivocally formal and operational. Indeed, their operational capability would derive directly from the formality of their concepts. (C13) EU HCI Engineering concepts would be generalisable over classes of design problem solutions. Since the principles are operational, their application (expressed as design solutions) would necessarily be specifiable. They would also be testable and so their reliability and generality could also be specified. (C14)

In this way would the principles, expressed in terms of the EU Conception of Engineering design knowledge, be validated. Such validated Engineering design principles would offer a better guarantee (that is, more assurance) of solving the HCI general design problem. Better, for example, than the experiential trial-and-error knowledge of craft HCI (C4) (C5) (C6) or the guidelines/heuristics of Applied Science HCI (C7) (C8) (C9) (C10) (C11) (C15) (F3) HCI Engineering principles, following the EU Conception of Engineering design knowledge, can be substantive or methodological. Methodological principles prescribe the methods for solving the general HCI design problem. Methodological principles would assure complete specification of all necessary levels of design solution representation. Substantive principles prescribe the features and properties of HCI systems that constitute solutions to the EU HCI Engineering design problem. (C20)

The extent, to which HCI engineering principles might be realisable in practice, in the longer term, remains to be seen and demonstrated. In the meantime, craft knowledge in whatever form – models, methods, heuristics, guidelines, experience, procedures etc cannot be other than be recruited to solve HCI design problems both by researchers and practitioners (C22) (F4)

Key concepts are shown in bold on their first appearance only.

Footnotes and Citations

Footnotes

 (F1) In the shorter term, to solve HCI design problems, either for research or for practice, any type of knowledge might be used.
(F2) Or indeed to other types of Engineering knowledge, for example, models and methods, intended to support the diagnosis of design problems and the prescription of their design solutions.
(F3) Craft HCI would also include craft engineering HCI – see also (F1) and (F2).
(F4) See also (F1), (F2) and (F3).
Citations
Long and Dowell (1989)

(C1) ‘The framework expresses the essential characteristics of the HCI discipline, and can be summarised as: ‘the use of HCI knowledge to support practices seeking solutions to the general problem of HCI’. (Page 9, Lines 16-19)

(C2) ‘ Some would claim HCI theory as explanatory laws, others as design principles. Some would claim HCI theory as directly supporting HCI practice, others as indirectly providing support. Some would claim HCI theory as effectively supporting HCI practice, whilst others may claim such support as non-existent.’ (Page 10, Lines 12-17)

(C3) ‘All definitions of disciplines make reference to discipline knowledge as the product of research or more generally of a field of study. Knowledge can be public (ultimately formal) or private (ultimately experiential). It may assume a number of forms; for example, it may be tacit, formal, experiential, codified – as in theories, laws and principles etc. It may also be maintained in a number of ways; for example, it may be expressed in journals, or learning systems, or it may only be embodied in procedures and tools. All disciplines would appear to have knowledge as a component (for example, scientific discipline knowledge, engineering discipline knowledge, medical discipline knowledge, etc). Knowledge, therefore, is a necessary characteristic of a discipline.’ (Page 11, Lines 30-38)

(C4) ‘Craft disciplines solve the general problems they address by practices of implementation and evaluation. Their practices are supported by knowledge typically in the form of heuristics; heuristics are implicit (as in the procedures of good practice) and informal (as in the advice provided by one craftsperson to another). Craft knowledge is acquired by practice and example, and so is experiential; it is neither explicit nor formal.’ (Page 16, Lines 4-8)

(C5) ‘…….. the (public) knowledge possessed by HCI as a craft discipline is not operational. That is to say, because it is either implicit or informal, it cannot be directly applied by those who are not associated with the generation of the heuristics or exposed to their use. If the heuristics are implicit in practice, they can be applied by others only by means of example practice. If the heuristics are informal, they can be applied only with the help of guidance from a successful practitioner (or by additional, but unvalidated, reasoning by the user).’ (Page 18, Lines 28-33)

(C6) ‘If craft knowledge is not testable, then neither is it likely to be generalisable ……To be clear, if being operational demands that (public) discipline knowledge can be directly applied by others than those who generated the knowledge, then being general demands that the knowledge be guaranteed to be appropriate in instances other than those in which it was generated. Yet, the knowledge possessed by HCI as a craft discipline applies only to those problems already addressed by its practice, that is, in the instances, in which it was generated.’ (Page 19, Lines 11 and 15-20)

(C7) ‘The discipline of science uses scientific knowledge (in the form of theories, models, laws, truth propositions, hypotheses, etc.) to support the scientific practice ……..Scientific knowledge is explicit and formal, operational, testable and generalisable. It is therefore refutable (if not proveable, Popper [1959])’. (Page 20, Lines 2-3 and 7-9)

(C8) ‘An applied science discipline is one which recruits scientific knowledge to the practice of solving its general problem – a design problem.’ (Page 20, Lines 16 and 17)

(C9) ‘ First, its science knowledge cannot be applied directly, not – as in the case of craft knowledge – because it is implicit or informal, but because the knowledge is not prescriptive; it is only explanatory and predictive. Its scope is not that of the general problem of design.’ (Page 23, Lines 20-23)

(C10) ‘Second, the guidelines based on the science knowledge, which are not predictive but prescriptive, are not defined, operationalised, tested or generalised with respect to desired effective performance. Their selection and application in any system would be a matter of heuristics (and so paradoxically of good practice).’ (Page 23, Lines 25-28)

(C11) ‘Science knowledge is explicit and formal, and so supports reasoning about the derivation of guidelines, their solution and application (although one might have to be a discipline specialist so to do).’ (Page 23, Lines 36-38)

(C12) ‘The discipline of engineering may characteristically solve its general problem (of design) by the specification of designs before their implementation. It is able to do so because of the prescriptive nature of its discipline knowledge supporting those practices – knowledge formulated as engineering principles.’ (Page 24, Lines 11-14)

(C13) ‘The conception of HCI engineering principles assumes the possibility of a codified, general and testable formulation of HCI discipline knowledge which might be prescriptively applied to designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. Such principles would be unequivocally formal and operational. Indeed their operational capability would derive directly from their formality, including the formality of their concepts.’ (Page 24, Lines 28-31)

(C14) ‘First, HCI engineering principles would be a generaliseable knowledge. …….. Second, engineering HCI principles would be operational, and so their application would be specifiable…….. Because they would be operational, they would be testable and their reliability and generality could be specified.’ (Page 27, Lines 20-22 and 36-28)

(C15) ‘ Although all three conceptions address the general problem of HCI, they differ concerning the knowledge recruited to solve the problem. Craft recruits heuristics; applied science recruits theories expressed as guidelines; and engineering recruits principles.’ (Page 28, Lines 22-24)

Dowell and Long (1989)

(C16) ‘The paper ….. examines the potential for Human Factors to formulate engineering principles. ……… A conception would provide the set of related concepts which both expressed the general design problem more formally, and which might be embodied in engineering principles.’ (Page 1513, Lines 9 and 10)

(C17) ‘However, a pre-requisite for the formulation of any engineering principle is a conception. A conception is a unitary (and consensus) view of a general design problem; its power lies in the coherence and completeness of its definition of the concepts, which can express that problem. Engineering principles are articulated in terms of those concepts.’ (Page 1514, Lines 23-27)

(C18) ‘Most definitions of disciplines assume three primary characteristics: a general problem; practices, providing solutions to that problem; and knowledge, supporting those practices.’ (Page 1514, Lines 43-45)

(C19) ‘Generally, the established engineering disciplines possess formal knowledge: a corpus of operationalised, tested, and generalised principles. Those principles are prescriptive, enabling the complete specification of design solutions before those designs are implemented (see Dowell and Long, 1988b). This theme of prescription in design is central to the thesis offered here.’ (Page 1520, Lines 1-5)

(C20) ‘Engineering principles can be substantive or methodological. Methodological Principles prescribe the methods for solving a general design problem optimally. ….. Methodological principles would assure each lower level of specification as being a complete representation of an immediately higher level. Substantive Principles prescribe the features and properties of artefacts, or systems that will constitute an optimal solution to a general design problem. (Page 1520, Lines 6-15)

(C21) ‘Such a conception ….. enables the formulation of engineering principles which embody and instantiate those concepts. ( Page 1520, Line 46 and Page 1521, Line 1)

(C22) ‘The extent to which HF engineering principles might be realiseable in practice remains to be seen. It is not supposed that the development of effective systems will never require craft skills in some form, and engineering principles are not seen to be incompatible with craft knowledge, particularly with respect to their instantiation. At a minimum, engineering principles might be expected to augment the craft knowledge of HF professionals. Yet the great potential of HF engineering principles for the effectiveness of the discipline demands serious consideration.’ (Page 1533, Lines 24-29)

 

Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI: Craft, Applied Science, and Engineering John Long and John Dowell 150 150 John

Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI: Craft, Applied Science, and Engineering John Long and John Dowell

Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI: Craft, Applied Science, and Engineering

John Long and John Dowell

Ergonomics Unit, University College London,

26 Bedford Way, London. WC1H 0AP.

 

The theme of HCI ’89 is ‘the theory and practice of HCI’. In providing a general introduction to the Conference, this paper develops the theme within a characterisation of alternative conceptions of the discipline of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI). First, consideration of disciplines in general suggests their complete definition can be summarised as: ‘knowledge, practices and a general problem having a particular scope, where knowledge supports practices seeking solutions to the general problem’. Second, the scope of the general problem of HCI is defined by reference to humans, computers, and the work they perform. Third, by intersecting these two definitions, a framework is proposed within which different conceptions of the HCI discipline may be established, ordered, and related. The framework expresses the essential characteristics of the HCI discipline, and can be summarised as: ‘the use of HCI knowledge to support practices seeking solutions to the general problem of HCI’. Fourth, three alternative conceptions of the discipline of HCI are identified. They are HCI as a craft discipline, as an applied scientific discipline, and as an engineering discipline. Each conception is considered in terms of its view of the general problem, the practices seeking solutions to the problem, and the knowledge supporting those practices; examples are provided. Finally, the alternative conceptions are reviewed, and the effectiveness of the discipline which each offers is comparatively assessed. The relationships between the conceptions in establishing a more effective discipline are indicated.

Published in: People and Computers V. Sutcliffe A. and Macaulay L. (ed.s).                      Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Proceedings of the Fifth Conference of the BCS    HCI SIG, Nottingham 5-8 September 1989. 2

Contents

  1. Introduction 2

1.1. Alternative Interpretations of the Theme 2

1.2. Alternative Conceptions of HCI: the Requirement for a Framework 2

1.3. Aims 3

  1. A Framework for Conceptions of the HCI Discipline 3

2.1. On the Nature of Disciplines 3

2.2. Of Humans Interacting with Computers 5

2.3. The Framework for Conceptions of the HCI Discipline 6

  1. Three Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI 8

3.1. Conception of HCI as a Craft Discipline 8

3.2. Conception of HCI as an Applied Science Discipline 11

3.3. Conception of HCI as an Engineering Discipline 15

  1. Summary and Conclusions 18
  2. Introduction

HCI ’89 is the fifth conference in the ‘People and Computers’ series organised by the British Computer Society’s HCI Specialist Group. The main theme of HCI ’89 is ‘the theory and practice of HCI’. The significance of the theme derives from the questions it prompts and from the Conference aims arising from it. For example, what is HCI? What is HCI practice? What theory supports HCI practice? How well does HCI theory support HCI practice? Addressing such questions develops the Conference theme and so advances the Conference goals.

1.1. Alternative Interpretations of the Theme

Any attempt to address these questions, however, admits no singular answer. For example, some would claim HCI as a science, others as engineering. Some would claim HCI practice as ‘trial and error’, others as ‘specify and implement’. Some would claim HCI theory as explanatory laws, others as design principles. Some would claim HCI theory as directly supporting HCI practice, others as indirectly providing support. Some would claim HCI theory as effectively supporting HCI practice, 3

whilst others may claim such support as non-existent. Clearly then, there will be many possible interpretations of the theme ‘the theory and practice of HCI’.

Answers to some of the questions prompted by the theme will be related. Different answers to the same question may be mutually exclusive; for example, types of practice as ‘trial and error’ or ‘specify and implement’ will likely be mutually exclusive. Answers to different questions may also be mutually exclusive; for example, HCI as engineering would likely exclude HCI theory as explanatory laws, and HCI practice as ‘trial and error’. And moreover, answers to some questions may constrain the answers to other questions; for example, types of HCI theory, perhaps design principles, may constrain the type of practice, perhaps as ‘specify and implement’.

1.2. Alternative Conceptions of HCI: the Requirement for a Framework

It follows that we must admit the possibility of alternative, and equally legitimate, conceptions of the HCI discipline – and therein, of its theory and practice. A conception of the HCI discipline offers a unitary view; its value lies in the coherence and completeness with which it enables understanding of the discipline, how the discipline operates, and its effectiveness. So for example, a conception of HCI might be either of a scientific or of an engineering discipline; its view of the theory and practice of the discipline would be different in the two cases. Its view of how the discipline might operate, and its expectations for the effectiveness of the discipline, would also be different in the two cases. This paper identifies alternative conceptions of HCI, and attempts a comparative assessment of the (potential) effectiveness of the discipline which each views. The requirement for identifying the different conceptions is both prompted and required by the development of the Conference theme.

To advance alternative conceptions of HCI, however, it is necessary first to formulate some form of analytic structure to ensure that conceptions supposed as alternatives are both complete and of the same subject, rather than being conceptions of complementary, or simply different, subjects. A suitable structure for this purpose would be a framework identifying the essential characteristics of the HCI discipline. By such a framework, instances of conceptions of the HCI discipline – claimed to be substantively different, but equivalent – might be established, ordered, and related. And hence, so might their views of its theories and practices.

The aims of this paper follow from the need to identify alternative conceptions of HCI as a discipline. The aims are described in the next section.

1.3. Aims

To address and develop the Conference theme of ‘the theory and practice of HCI’ – and so to advance the goals of HCI ’89 – the aims of this paper are as follows:

(i) to propose a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline

(ii) to identify and exemplify alternative conceptions of the HCI discipline in terms of the framework

(iii) to evaluate the effectiveness of the discipline as viewed by each of the conceptions, and to indicate the possible relationships between the conceptions in establishing a more effective discipline.

  1. A Framework for Conceptions of the HCI Discipline

Two prerequisites of a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline are assumed. The first is a definition of disciplines appropriate for the expression of HCI. The second is a definition of the province of concern of the HCI discipline which, whilst broad enough to include all disparate aspects, enables the discipline’s boundaries to be identified. Each of these prerequisites will be 4

addressed in turn (Sections 2.1. and 2.2.). From them is derived a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline (Section 2.3.). Source material for the framework is to be found in (Dowell & Long [1988]; Dowell & Long [manuscript submitted for publication]; and Long [1989]).

2.1. On the Nature of Disciplines

Most definitions assume three primary characteristics of disciplines: knowledge; practice; and a general problem.

All definitions of disciplines make reference to discipline knowledge as the product of research or more generally of a field of study. Knowledge can be public (ultimately formal) or private (ultimately experiential). It may assume a number of forms; for example, it may be tacit, formal, experiential, codified – as in theories, laws and principles etc. It may also be maintained in a number of ways; for example, it may be expressed in journals, or learning systems, or it may only be embodied in procedures and tools. All disciplines would appear to have knowledge as a component (for example, scientific discipline knowledge, engineering discipline knowledge, medical discipline knowledge, etc). Knowledge, therefore, is a necessary characteristic of a discipline.

Consideration of different disciplines suggests that practice is also a necessary characteristic of a discipline. Further, a discipline’s knowledge is used by its practices to solve a general (discipline) problem. For example, the discipline of science includes the scientific practice addressing the general (scientific) problem of explanation and prediction. The discipline of engineering includes the engineering practice addressing the general (engineering) problem of design. The discipline of medicine includes the medical practice addressing the general (medical) problem of supporting health. Practice, therefore, and the general (discipline) problem which it uses knowledge to solve, are also necessary characteristics of a discipline.

Clearly, disciplines are here being distinguished by the general (discipline) problem they address. The scientific discipline addresses the general (scientific) problem of explanation and prediction, the engineering discipline addresses the general (engineering) problem of design, and so on. Yet consideration also suggests those general (discipline) problems each have the necessary property of a scope. Decomposition of a general (discipline) problem with regard to its scope exposes (subsumed) general problems of particular scopes1. This decomposition allows the further division of disciplines into sub-disciplines.

For example, the scientific discipline includes the disciplines of physics, biology, psychology, etc., each distinguished by the particular scope of the general problem it addresses. The discipline of psychology addresses a general (scientific) problem whose particular scope is the mental and physical behaviours of humans and animals. It attempts to explain and predict those behaviours. It is distinguished from the discipline of biology which addresses a general problem whose particular scope includes anatomy, physiology, etc. Similarly, the discipline of engineering includes the disciplines of civil, mechanical, electrical engineering, etc. Electrical engineering is distinguished by the particular scope of the general (engineering) problem it addresses, i.e., the scope of electrical artefacts. And similarly, the discipline of medicine includes the disciplines of dermatology, neurology etc., each distinguished by the particular scope of the general problem it addresses.

1Notwithstanding the so-called ‘hierarchy theory ‘ which assumes a phenomenon to occur at a particular level of complexity and to subsume others at a lower level (eg, Pattee, 1973). 5

 

Two basic properties of disciplines are therefore concluded. One is the property of the scope of a general discipline problem. The other is the possibility of division of a discipline into sub-disciplines by decomposition of its general discipline problem.

Taken together, the three necessary characteristics of a discipline (and the two basic properties additionally concluded), suggest the definition of a discipline as: ‘the use of knowledge to support practices seeking solutions to a general problem having a particular scope’. It is represented schematically in Figure 1. This definition will be used subsequently to express HCI.

2.2. Of Humans Interacting with Computers

The second prerequisite of a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline is a definition of the scope of the general problem addressed by the discipline. In delimiting the province of concern of the HCI discipline, such a definition might assure the completeness of any one conception (see Section 1.2.).

HCI concerns humans and computers interacting to perform work. It implicates: humans, both individually and in organisations; computers, both as programmable machines and functionally embedded devices within machines (stand alone or networked); and work performed by humans and computers within organisational contexts. It implicates both behaviours and structures of humans and computers. It implicates the interactions between humans and computers in performing both physical work (ie, transforming energy) and abstract work (ie, transforming information). Further, since both organisations and individuals have requirements for the effectiveness with which work is performed, also implicated is the optimisation of all aspects of the interactions supporting effectiveness.

Taken together, these implications suggest a definition of the scope of the general (discipline) problem of HCI. It is expressed, in summary, as ‘humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively’; it is represented schematically in Figure 2. This definition, in conjunction with the general definition of disciplines, will now enable expression of a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline.

2.3. The Framework for Conceptions of the HCI Discipline

The possibility of alternative, and equally legitimate, conceptions of the discipline of HCI was earlier postulated. This section proposes a framework within which different conceptions may be established, ordered, and related.

Given the definition of its scope (above), and the preceding definition of disciplines, the general problem addressed by the discipline of HCI is asserted as: ‘the design of humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively’. It is a general (discipline) problem of design : its ultimate product is designs. The practices of the HCI discipline seek solutions to this general problem, for example: in the construction of computer hardware and software; in the selection and training of humans to use computers; in aspects of the management of work, etc. HCI discipline knowledge supports the practices that provide such solutions.

The general problem of HCI can be decomposed (with regard to its scope) into two general problems, each having a particular scope. Whilst subsumed within the general problem of HCI, these two general problems are expressed as: ‘the design of humans interacting with computers’; and ‘the design of computers interacting with humans’. Each problem can be associated with a different sub-discipline of HCI. Human Factors (HF), or Ergonomics, addresses the problem of designing the human as they interact with a computer. Software Engineering (SE) addresses the problem of designing the computer as it interacts with a human. With different – though complementary – aims, both sub-disciplines address the problem of designing humans and computers which interact to perform work effectively. However, the HF discipline concerns the physical and mental aspects of the human and is supported by HF discipline knowledge. The SE discipline concerns the physical and software aspects of the computer and is supported by SE discipline knowledge.

Hence, we may express a framework for conceptions of the discipline of HCI as:

‘the use of HCI knowledge to support practices seeking solutions to the general problem of HCI of designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. HCI knowledge is 7

constituted of HF knowledge and SE knowledge, respectively supporting HF practices and SE practices. Those practices respectively address the HF general problem of the design of humans interacting with computers, and the SE general problem of the design of computers interacting with humans’. The framework is represented schematically in Figure 3.

Importantly, the framework supposes the nature of effectiveness of the HCI discipline itself. There are two apparent components of this effectiveness. The first is the success with which its practices solve the general problem of designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. It may be understood to be synonymous with ‘product quality’. The second component of effectiveness of the discipline is the resource costs incurred in solving the general problem to a given degree of success – costs incurred by both the acquisition and application of knowledge. It may be understood to be synonymous with ‘production costs’.

The framework will be used in Section 3 to establish, order, and relate alternative conceptions of HCI. It supports comparative assessment of the effectiveness of the discipline as supposed by each conception.

 

  1. Three Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI

A review of the literature was undertaken to identify alternative conceptions of HCI, that is, conceptions of the use of knowledge to support practices solving the general problem of the design of humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. The review identified three such conceptions. They are HCI as a craft discipline; as an applied scientific discipline; and as an engineering discipline. Each conception will be described and exemplified in terms of the framework.

3.1. Conception of HCI as a Craft Discipline

Craft disciplines solve the general problems they address by practices of implementation and evaluation. Their practices are supported by knowledge typically in the form of heuristics; heuristics are implicit (as in the procedures of good practice) and informal (as in the advice provided by one craftsperson to another). Craft knowledge is acquired by practice and example, and so is experiential; it is neither explicit nor formal. Conception of HCI as a craft discipline is represented schematically in Figure 4.

HCI as a craft discipline addresses the general problem of designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. For example, Prestel uses Videotex technology to provide a public information service which also includes remote electronic shopping and banking facilities (Gilligan & Long [1984]). The practice of HCI to solve the general problem of Prestel interaction design is by implementation, evaluation and iteration (Buckley [1989]). For example, Videotex screen designers try out new solutions – for assigning colours to displays, for selecting formats to express user instructions, etc. Successful forms of interaction are integrated into accepted good practice – for example, clearly distinguishing references to domain ‘objects’ (goods on sale) from references to interface ‘objects’ (forms to order the goods) and so reducing user difficulties and errors. Screen designs successful in supporting interactions are copied by other designers. Unsuccessful interactions are excluded from subsequent implementations – for example, the repetition of large scale logos on all the screens (because the screens are written top-to-bottom and the interaction is slowed unacceptably).

HCI craft knowledge, supporting practice, is maintained by practice itself. For example, in the case of Videotex shopping, users often fail to cite on the order form the reference number of the goods they wish to purchase. A useful design heuristic is to try prompting users with the relevant information, for example, by reminding them on the screen displaying the goods that the associated reference number is required for ordering and should be noted. An alternative heuristic is to try re-labelling the reference number of the goods, for example to ‘ordering’ rather than reference number. Heuristics such as these are formulated and tried out on new implementations and are retained if associated with successful interactions. To illustrate HCI as a craft discipline more completely, there follows a detailed example taken from a case history reporting the design of a text editor (Bornat & Thimbleby [1989]).

Bornat and Thimbleby are computer scientists who, in the 1970s, designed a novel text display editor called ‘Ded’. The general problem of HCI for them was to design a text editor which would enable the user to enter text, review it, add to it, to reorganise its structure and to print it. In addition, the editor was to be easy to use. They characterise their practice as ‘production’ (implementation as used here) suffused by design activity. Indeed, their view is that Ded was not designed but evolved. There was always a fully working version of the text editor to be discussed, even from the very early days.

 

The evolution, however, was informed by ‘user interface principles’ (which they sometimes call theories and at other times call design ideas) which they invented themselves, tried out on Ded, retained if successful and reformulated if unsuccessful. The status of the principles at the time of their use would be termed here craft discipline knowledge or heuristics. (Subsequent validation of the heuristics as other than craft knowledge would of course be possible, and so change this status.) For example, ‘to indicate to users exactly what they are doing, try providing rapid feedback for every keypress’. Most feedback was embodied in changes to the display (cursor movements, characters added or deleted, etc.) which were visible to the user. However, if the effect of a keypress was not visible, there was no effect, but a bell rang to let the user know. In this way, the craft heuristic supporting the SE craft practice – by informing the design of the computer interacting with the human – can be expressed as: ‘if key depression and no display change, then ring bell’. The heuristic also supported HF craft practice – by informing the design of the human interacting with the computer. It may be expressed as: ‘if key pressed and no display change seen, and bell heard, then understand no effect of keypress (other than bell ring)’.

Another example of a craft heuristic used by Bornat and Thimbleby (and one introduced to them by a colleague) is ‘to ensure that information in the computer is what the user thinks it is, try using only 11

one mode’. The heuristic supported SE practice, informing the design of the computer interacting with the human – ‘if text displayed, and cursor under a character, and key depression, then insert character before cursor position’. The heuristic also supported HF practice, informing the design of the human interacting with the computer – ‘if text seen, and cursor located under a character, and key has been pressed, then only the insertion of a character before the cursor position can be seen to be effected (but nothing else)’.

In summary, the design of Ded by Bornat and Thimbleby illustrates the critical features of HCI as a craft discipline. They addressed the specific form of the general problem (general because their colleague suggested part of the solution – one ‘mode’ – and because their heuristics were made available to others practising the craft discipline). Their practices involved the iterative implementation and evaluation of the computer interacting with the human, and of the human interacting with the computer. They were supported by craft discipline heuristics – for example: ‘simple operations should be simple, and the complex possible’. Such craft knowledge was either implicit or informal; the concepts of ‘simple’ and ‘complex’ remaining undefined, together with their associated operations (the only definitions being those implicit in Ded and in the expertise of Bornat and Thimbleby, or informal in their report). And finally, the heuristics were generated for a purpose, tried out for their adequacy (in the case of Ded) and then retained or discarded (for further application to Ded). This too is characteristic of a craft discipline. Accepting that Ded met its requirements for both functionality (enter text, review text, etc.) and for usability (use straight away, etc) – as claimed by Bornat and Thimbleby – it can be accepted as an example of good HCI craft practice.

To conclude this characterisation of HCI as a craft discipline, let us consider its potential for effectiveness. As earlier proposed (Section 2.3), an effective discipline is one whose practices successfully solve its general problem, whilst incurring acceptable costs in acquiring and applying the knowledge supporting those practices (see Dowell & Long [1988]). HCI as a craft discipline will be evaluated in general for its effectiveness in solving the general problem of designing humans and computers interacting, as exemplified by Bornat and Thimbleby’s development of Ded in particular.

Consideration of HCI as a craft discipline suggests that it fails to be effective (Dowell & Long [manuscript submitted for publication]). The first explanation of this – and one that may at first appear paradoxical – is that the (public) knowledge possessed by HCI as a craft discipline is not operational. That is to say, because it is either implicit or informal, it cannot be directly applied by those who are not associated with the generation of the heuristics or exposed to their use. If the heuristics are implicit in practice, they can be applied by others only by means of example practice. If the heuristics are informal, they can be applied only with the help of guidance from a successful practitioner (or by additional, but unvalidated, reasoning by the user). For example, the heuristic ”simple operations should be simple, and the complex possible’ could not be implemented without the help of Bornat and Thimbleby or extensive interpretation by the designer. The heuristic provides insufficient information for its operationalisation. In addition, since craft heuristics cannot be directly applied to practice, practice cannot be easily planned and coordinated. Further, when HF and SE design practice are allocated to different people or groups, practice cannot easily be integrated. (Bornat was responsible for both HF and SE design practice and was also final arbiter of design solutions.) Thus, with respect to the requirement for its knowledge to be operational, the HCI craft discipline fails to be effective.

If craft knowledge is not operational, then it is unlikely to be testable – for example, whether the ‘simple’ operations when implemented are indeed ‘simple’, and whether the ‘complex’ operations when implemented are indeed ‘possible’. Hence, the second reason why HCI as a craft discipline fails to be effective is because there is no guarantee that practice applying HCI craft knowledge will have the consequences intended (guarantees cannot be provided if testing is precluded). There is no guarantee that its application to designing humans and computers interacting will result in their performing work effectively. For example, the heuristic of providing rapid feedback in Ded does not guarantee that users know what they are doing, because they might not understand the contingencies of the feedback. (However, it would be expected to help understanding, at least to

some extent, and more often than not). Thus, with respect to the guarantee that knowledge applied by practice will solve the general HCI problem, the HCI craft discipline fails to be effective.

If craft knowledge is not testable, then neither is it likely to be generalisable – for example, whether ‘simple’ operations that are simple when implemented in Ded are also ‘simple’ when implemented in a different text editor. Hence, the third explanation of the failure of HCI as a craft discipline to be effective arises from the absence of generality of its knowledge. To be clear, if being operational demands that (public) discipline knowledge can be directly applied by others than those who generated the knowledge, then being general demands that the knowledge be guaranteed to be appropriate in instances other than those in which it was generated. Yet, the knowledge possessed by HCI as a craft discipline applies only to those problems already addressed by its practice, that is, in the instances in which it was generated. Bornat and Thimbleby’s heuristics for solving the design problem of Ded may have succeeded in this instance, but the ability of the heuristics to support the solution of other design problems is unknown and, until a solution is attempted, unknowable. The suitability of the heuristics ‘ignore deficiencies of the terminal hardware’ and ‘undo one keystroke at a time’ for a system controlling the processes of a nuclear power plant could only be established by implementation and evaluation in the context of the power plant. In the absence of a well defined general scope for the problems to be addressed by the knowledge supporting HCI craft practice, each problem of designing humans and computers interacting has to be solved anew. Thus, with respect to the generality of its knowledge, the HCI craft discipline fails to be effective.

Further consideration of HCI as a craft discipline suggests that the costs incurred in generating, and so in acquiring craft knowledge, are few and acceptable. For example, Bornat and Thimbleby generated their design heuristics as required, that is – as evaluation showed the implementation of one heuristic to fail. Further, heuristics can be easily communicated (if not applied) and applied now (if applicable). Thus, with respect to the costs of acquiring its knowledge, HCI as a craft discipline would seem to be effective.

In summary, although the costs of acquiring its knowledge would appear acceptable, and although its knowledge when applied by practice sometimes successfully solves the general problem of designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively, the craft discipline of HCI is ineffective because it is generally unable to solve the general problem. It is ineffective because its knowledge is neither operational (except in practice itself), nor generalisable, nor guaranteed to achieve its intended effect – except as the continued success of its practice and its continued use by successful craftspeople.

3.2. Conception of HCI as an Applied Science Discipline

The discipline of science uses scientific knowledge (in the form of theories, models, laws, truth propositions, hypotheses, etc.) to support the scientific practice (analytic, empirical, etc.) of solving the general problem of explaining and predicting the phenomena within its scope (structural, behavioural, etc.) (see Section 3.1). Science solves its general problem by hypothesis and test. Hypotheses may be based on deduction from theory or induction from regularities of structure or behaviour associated with the phenomena. Scientific knowledge is explicit and formal, operational, testable and generalisable. It is therefore refutable (if not proveable; Popper [1959]).

Scientific disciplines can be associated with both HF – for example, psychology, linguistics, artificial intelligence, etc. and SE – for example, computer science, artificial intelligence, etc. Psychology explains and predicts the phenomena of the mental life and behaviour of humans (for example, the acquisition of cognitive skill (Anderson [1983])); computer science explains, and predicts the phenomena of the computability of computers as Turing-compatible machines (for example, as concerns abstract data types (Scott [1976])).

An applied science discipline is one which recruits scientific knowledge to the practice of solving its general problem – a design problem. HCI as an applied science discipline uses scientific knowledge as an aid to addressing the general problem of designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. HCI as an applied science is represented schematically in Figure 5.

 

 

 An example of psychological science knowledge which might be recruited to support the HF practice concerns the effect of feedback on sequences of behaviour, for example, noise and touch on keyboard operation, and confirmatory feedback on the sending of electronic messages (Hammond [1987]). (Feedback is chosen here because it was also used to exemplify craft discipline knowledge (see Section 3.1) and the contrast is informative.) Psychology provides the following predictive truth proposition concerning feedback: ‘controlled sequences need confirmatory feedback (both required and redundant); automated sequences only need required feedback during the automated sequence’. (The research supporting this predictive (but also explanatory proposition) would be expected to have defined and operationalised the terms – ‘feedback’, ‘controlled’, etc. and to have reported the empirical data on which the proposition is based.)

However, as it stands, the proposition cannot contribute to the solution of the HF design problem such as that posed by the development of the text-editor Ded (Bornat & Thimbleby [1989] – see Section 3.1). The proposition only predicts the modifications of behaviour sequences by feedback under a given set of conditions. It does not prescribe the feedback required by Ded to achieve effective performance of work (enter text, review it, etc.; to be usable straight away etc.).

Predictive psychological knowledge can be made prescriptive. For example Hammond transforms the predictive truth proposition concerning feedback into the following prescriptive proposition (or ‘guideline’): “When a procedure, task or sequence is not automatic to users (either because they are novice users or because the task is particularly complex or difficult), provide feedback in a number of complementary forms. Feedback should be provided both during the task sequence, to inform the user that things are progressing satisfactorily or otherwise, and at completion, to inform the user that the task sequence has been brought to a close satisfactorily or otherwise”.

However, although prescriptive, it is so with respect to the modifiability of sequences of behaviour and not with respect to the effective performance of work. Although application of the guideline might be expected to modify behaviour (for example, decrease errors and increase speed), there is no indication of how the modification (either in absolute terms, or relative to other forms of feedback or its absence) would ensure any particular desired effective performance of work. Nor can there be, since its prescriptive form has not been characterised, operationalised, tested, and generalised with respect to design for effective performance (but only the knowledge on which it is based with respect to behavioural phenomena).

As a result, the design of a system involving feedback, configured in the manner prescribed by the guideline, would still necessarily proceed by implementation, evaluation, and iteration. For example, although Bornat and Thimbleby appear not to have provided complementary feedback for the novice users of Ded, but only feedback by keypress (and not in addition on sequence completion – for example, at the end of editing a command), their users appear to have achieved the desired effective performance of work of entering text, using Ded straight away etc.

Computer science knowledge might similarly be recruited to support SE practice in solving the problem of designing computers interacting with humans to perform work effectively. For example, explanatory and predictive propositions concerning computability, complexity, etc. might be transformed into prescriptive propositions informing system implementation, perhaps in ways similar to the attempt to achieve ‘effective computability’ (Kapur & Srivs [1988]). Alternatively, predictive computer science propositions might support general prescriptive SE principles, such as modularity, abstraction, hiding, localization, uniformity, completeness, confirmability, etc. (Charette [1986]). These general principles might in turn be used to support specific principles to solve the SE design problem of computers interacting with humans.

However, as in the case of psychology, for as long as the general problem of computer science is the explanation and prediction of computability, and not the design of computers interacting with humans to perform work effectively, computer science knowledge cannot be prescriptive with respect to the latter. Whatever computer science knowledge (for example, use of abstract data types) or general SE principles (for example, modularity) informed or could have informed Bornat and Thimbleby’s development of Ded, the design would still have had to proceed by implementation, evaluation and iteration, because neither the computer science knowledge nor the SE principles address the problem of designing for the effective performance of work – entering text, using Ded straight away, etc.

To illustrate HCI as an applied science discipline more completely, there follows a detailed example taken from a case history reporting the design of a computer-aided learning system to induct new undergraduates into their field of study – cognitive psychology (Hammond & Allinson [1988]).

Hammond and Allinson called upon three areas of psychological knowledge, concerned with understanding and learning, to support the design of their system. These were ‘encoding specificity’

theory (Tulving [1972]), ‘schema’ theory (Mandler [1979]), and ‘depth of processing’ theory (Craik & Lockhart [1972]). Only the first will be used as an example here. ‘Encoding specificity’ and ‘encoding variability’ explain and predict peoples’ memory behaviours. ‘Encoding specificity’ asserts that material can be recalled if it contains distinctive retrieval cues that can be generated at the time of recall. ‘Encoding variability’ asserts that multiple exposure to the same material in different contexts results in easier recall, since the varied contexts will result in a greater number of potential retrieval cues.

On the basis of this psychological knowledge, Hammond and Allinson construct the guideline or principle: ‘provide distinctive and multiple forms of representation.’ They followed this prescription in their learning system by using the graphical and dynamic presentation of materials, working demonstrations and varied perspectives of the same information. However, although the guideline might have been expected to modify learning behaviour towards that of the easier recall of materials, the system design would have had to proceed by implementation, evaluation, and iteration. The theory of encoding specificity does not address the problem of the design of effective learning, in this case – new undergraduate induction, and the guideline has not been defined, operationalised, tested or generalised with respect to effective learning. Effective induction learning might follow from application of the guideline, but equally it might not (in spite of materials being recalled).

Although Hammond and Allinson do not report whether computer science knowledge was recruited to support the solution of the SE problem of designing the computer interacting with the undergraduates, nor whether general SE principles were recruited, the same conclusion would follow as for the use of psychological knowledge. Effective induction learning performance might follow from the application of notions such as effective computability, or of principles such as modularity, but equally it might not (in spite of the computer’s program being more computably effective and better structured).

In summary, the design of the undergraduate induction system by Hammond and Allinson illustrates the critical features of HCI as an applied science discipline. They addressed the specific form of the general problem (general because the knowledge and guidelines employed were intended to support a wide range of designs). Their practice involved the application of guidelines, the iterative implementation of the interacting computer and interacting human, and their evaluation. The implementation was supported by the use of psychological knowledge which formed the basis for the guidelines. The psychological knowledge (encoding specificity) was defined, operationalised, tested and generalised. The guideline ‘provide distinctive and multiple forms of representation’ was neither defined, operationalised, tested nor generalised with respect to effective learning performance.

Finally, consider the effectiveness of HCI as an applied science discipline. An evaluation suggests that many of the conclusions concerning HCI as a craft discipline also hold for HCI as an applied science discipline. First, its science knowledge cannot be applied directly, not – as in the case of craft knowledge – because it is implicit or informal, but because the knowledge is not prescriptive; it is only explanatory and predictive. Its scope is not that of the general problem of design. The theory of encoding specificity is not directly applicable.

Second, the guidelines based on the science knowledge, which are not predictive but prescriptive, are not defined, operationalised, tested or generalised with respect to desired effective performance. Their selection and application in any system would be a matter of heuristics (and so paradoxically of good practice). Even if the guideline of providing distinctive and multiple forms of representation worked in the case of undergraduate induction, it could not be generalised on the basis of this good practice alone.

Third, the application of guidelines based on science knowledge does not guarantee the consequences intended, that is effective performance. The provision of distinctive and multiple forms of representation may enhance learning behaviours, but not necessarily such as to achieve the effective undergraduate induction desired.

HCI as an applied science discipline, however, differs in two important respects from HCI as a craft discipline. Science knowledge is explicit and formal, and so supports reasoning about the derivation of guidelines, their solution and application (although one might have to be a discipline specialist so to do). Second, science knowledge (of encoding specificity, for example) would be expected to be more correct, coherent and complete than common sense knowledge concerning learning and memory behaviours.

Further, consideration of HCI as an applied science discipline suggests that the costs incurred in generating, and so in acquiring applied science knowledge, are both high (in acquiring science knowledge) and low (in generating guidelines). Whether the costs are acceptable depends on the extent to which the guidelines are effective. However, as indicated earlier, they are neither generalisable nor offer guarantees of effective performance.

In summary, although its knowledge when applied by practice in the form of guidelines sometimes solves the general problem of designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively, the applied science discipline is ultimately ineffective because it is generally unsuccessful in solving the general problem and its costs may be unacceptable. It fails to be effective principally because its knowledge is not directly applicable and because the guidelines based on its knowledge are neither generalisable, nor guaranteed to achieve their intended effect.

3.3. Conception of HCI as an Engineering Discipline

The discipline of engineering may characteristically solve its general problem (of design) by the specification of designs before their implementation. It is able to do so because of the prescriptive nature of its discipline knowledge supporting those practices – knowledge formulated as engineering principles. Further, its practices are characterised by their aim of ‘design for performance’. Engineering principles may enable designs to be prescriptively specified for artefacts, or systems which when implemented, demonstrate a prescribed and assured performance. And further, engineering disciplines may solve their general problem by exploiting a decompositional approach to design. Designs specified at a general level of description may be systematically decomposed until their specification is possible at a level of description of their complete implementation. Engineering principles may assure each level of specification as a representation of the previous level.

A conception of HCI as an engineering discipline is also apparent (for example: Dix & Harrison [1987]; Dowell & Long [manuscript submitted for publication]). It is a conception of HCI discipline knowledge as (ideally) constituted of (HF and SE) engineering principles, and its practices (HF and SE practices) as (ideally) specifying then implementing designs. This Section summarises the conception (schematically represented in Figure 6) and attempts to indicate the effectiveness of such a discipline.

The conception of HCI engineering principles assumes the possibility of a codified, general and testable formulation of HCI discipline knowledge which might be prescriptively applied to designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. Such principles would be unequivocally formal and operational. Indeed their operational capability would derive directly from their formality, including the formality of their concepts – for example, the concepts of ‘simple’ and ‘complex’ would have an explicit and consistent definition (see Section 3.1).

The complete and coherent definition of concepts, as necessary for the formulation of HCI engineering principles, would occur within a public and consensus conception of the general problem of HCI. A proposal for the form of such a conception (Dowell & Long [manuscript submitted for publication]), intended to promote the formulation of HCI engineering principles, can be summarised here. It dichotomises ‘interactive worksystems’ which perform work, and ‘domains of application’ in which work originates, is performed, and has its consequences. An interactive worksystem is conceptualised as the interacting behaviours of a human (the ‘user’) and a computer:

it is a behavioural system. The user and computer constitute behavioural systems in their own right, and therefore sub-systems of the interactive worksystem. Behaviours are the trajectory of states of humans and computers in their execution of work. The behaviours of the interactive worksystem are reflexive with two independent structures, a human structure of the user and a hardware and software structure of the computer. The behaviours of the interactive worksystem are both physical and informational, and so also are its structures. Further, behaviour incurs a resource cost, distinguished as the ‘structural’ resource cost of establishing and maintaining the structure able to support behaviour, and the ‘behavioural’ resource cost of recruiting the structure to express behaviour.

 

 

 The behaviours of an interactive worksystem intentionally effect, and so correspond with, transformations of objects. Objects are physical and abstract and exhibit the affordance for transformations arising from the state potential of their attributes. A domain of application is a class of transformation afforded by a class of objects. An organisations` requirements for specific transformations of objects are expressed as product goals; they motivate the behaviours of an interactive worksystem.

The effectiveness of an interactive worksystem is expressed in the concept of performance. Performance assimilates concepts expressing the transformation of objects with regard to its

satisfying a product goal, and concepts expressing the resource costs incurred in realising that transformation. Hence, performance relates an interactive worksystem with a domain of application. A desired performance may be specified for any worksystem attempting to satisfy a particular product goal.

The concepts described enable the expression of the general problem addressed by an engineering discipline of HCI as: specify then implement user behaviour {U} and computer behaviour {C}, such that {U} interacting with {C} constitutes an interactive worksystem exhibiting desired performance (PD). It is implicit in this expression that the specification of behaviour supposes and enables specification of the structure supporting that behaviour. HCI engineering principles are conceptualised as supporting the practices of an engineering HCI discipline in specifying implementable designs for the interacting behaviours of both the user and computer that would achieve PD.

This conception of the general problem of an engineering discipline of HCI supposes its further decomposition into two related general problems of different particular scopes. One problem engenders the discipline of HF, the other the discipline of SE; both disciplines being incorporated in HCI. The problem engendering the discipline of SE is expressed as: specify then implement {C}, such that {C} interacting with {U} constitutes an interactive worksystem exhibiting PD. The problem engendering the discipline of HF is expressed as: specify then implement {U}, such that {U} interacting with {C} constitutes an interactive worksystem exhibiting PD.

The disciplines of SE and HF might each possess their own principles. The abstracted form of those principles is visible. An HF engineering principle would take as input a performance requirement of the interactive worksystem, and a specified behaviour of the computer, and prescribe the necessary interacting behaviour of the user. An SE engineering principle would take as input the performance requirement of the interactive worksystem, and a specified behaviour of the user, and prescribe the necessary interacting behaviour of the computer.

Given the independence of their principles, the engineering disciplines of SE and HF might each pursue their own practices, having commensurate and integrated roles in the development of interactive worksystems. Whilst SE specified and implemented the interacting behaviours of computers, HF would specify and implement the interacting behaviours of users. Together, the practices of SE and HF would aim to produce interactive worksystems which achieved PD.

It is the case, however, that the contemporary discipline of HF does not possess engineering principles of this idealised form. Dowell & Long [manuscript submitted for publication) have postulated the form of potential HF engineering principles for application to the training of designers interacting with particular visualisation techniques of CAD systems. A visualisation technique is a graphical representational form within which images of artefacts are displayed; for example, the 21/2 D wireframe representational form of the Necker cube. The supposed principle would prescribe the visual search strategy {u} of the designer interacting with a specified display behaviour {c} of the computer (supported by a specified visualisation technique) to achieve a desired performance in the ‘benchmark’ evaluation of a design.

Neither does the contemporary discipline of SE possess engineering principles of the idealised form discussed. However, formal models of the interaction of display editors proposed by Dix and Harrison [1987] may show potential for development in this respect. For example, Dix and Harrison model the (behavioural) property of a command that is ‘passive’, a command having no effect on the ‘data’ component of the computer’s state. Defining a projection from state into result as r: SR, a passive command c has the property that r(s) = r(c(s)). Although the model has a formal expression, the user behaviour interacting with the (passive) computer behaviour is only implied, and the model makes no reference to desired performance.

It is likely the case, however, that some would claim the (idealised) conception of HCI as an engineering discipline to be unrealiseable. They might justify their objection by claiming the general problem of HCI to be ‘too soft’ to allow the development of engineering principles – that human behaviour is too indeterministic (too unspecifiable) to be subject to such principles. Yet human behaviour can be usefully deterministic to some degree – as demonstrated, for example, by the response of driver behaviour to traffic system protocols. There may well be at least a commensurate potential for the development of HCI engineering principles.

To conclude this summary description of the conception of an engineering discipline of HCI, we might consider the potential effectiveness of such a discipline. As before, effectiveness is evaluated as the success with which the discipline might solve its general problem, and the costs incurred with regard to both the acquisition and application of knowledge.

First, HCI engineering principles would be a generaliseable knowledge. Hence, application of principles to solving each new design problem could be direct and efficient with regard to costs incurred. The discipline would be effective. Second, engineering HCI principles would be operational, and so their application would be specifiable. The further consequence of this would be that the roles of HF and SE in Systems Development could be specified and integrated, providing better planned and executed development programmes. The minimisation of application costs would result in an effective discipline. Third, engineering principles would have a guaranteed efficacy. Because they would be operational, they would be testable and their reliability and generality could be specified. Their consequent assurance of product quality would render effective an engineering discipline of HCI.

Finally, consideration of HCI as an engineering discipline suggests that the costs of formulating engineering principles would be severe. A research programme committed to formulating even a basic corpus of HCI engineering principles might only be conceived as a long-term endeavour of extreme scale.

In summary, although the costs of their formulation would be severe, the potential of a corpus of engineering principles for improving product quality is large, and so also might be the potential for effectiveness of an engineering discipline of HCI.

  1. Summary and Conclusions

This paper has developed the Conference theme of ‘the theory and practice of HCI’. Generalisation of the theme, in terms of a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline, has shown that in addition to theory and practice, the theme needs to explicitly reference the general problem addressed by the discipline of HCI and the scope of the general problem.

The proposal made here is that the general problem of HCI is the design of humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. The qualification of the general problem as ‘design’, and the addition to the scope of that problem of ‘…. to perform work effectively’, has important consequences for the different conceptions of HCI (see Section 3). For example, since design is not the general problem of science, scientific knowledge (for example, psychology or computer science) cannot be recruited directly to the practice of solving the general problem of design (see Barnard, Grudin & Maclean [1989]). Further, certain attempts to develop complete engineering principles for HCI fail to qualify as such, because they make no reference to ‘…. to perform work effectively’ (Dix & Harrison [1987]; Thimbleby [1984]).

Development of the theme indicated there might be no singular conception of the discipline of HCI. Although all conceptions of HCI as a discipline necessarily include the notion of practice (albeit of different types), the concept of theory is more readily associated with HCI as an applied science discipline, because scientific knowledge in its most correct, coherent and complete form is typically expressed as theories. Craft knowledge is more typically expressed as heuristics. Engineering

knowledge is more typically expressed as principles. If HCI knowledge is limited to theory, and theory is presumed to be that of science, then other conceptions of HCI as a discipline are excluded (for example, Dowell & Long [manuscript submitted for publication]).

Finally, generalisation of the Conference theme has identified two conceptions of HCI as a discipline as alternatives to the applied science conception implied by the theme. The other two conceptions are HCI as a craft discipline and HCI as an engineering discipline. Although all three conceptions address the general problem of HCI, they differ concerning the knowledge recruited to solve the problem. Craft recruits heuristics; applied science recruits theories expressed as guidelines; and engineering recruits principles. They also differ in the practice they espouse to solve the general problem. Craft typically implements, evaluates and iterates (Bornat & Thimbleby [1989]); applied science typically selects guidelines to inform implementation, evaluation and iteration (although guidelines may also be generated on the basis of extant knowledge, e.g. – Hammond & Allinson [1988]); and engineering typically would specify and then implement (Dowell & Long [1988]).

The different types of knowledge and the different types of practice have important consequences for the effectiveness of any discipline of HCI. Heuristics are easy to generate, but offer no guarantee that the design solution will exhibit the properties of performance desired. Scientific theories are difficult and costly to generate, and the guidelines derived from them (like heuristics) offer no final guarantee concerning performance. Engineering principles would offer guarantees, but are predicted to be difficult, costly and slow to develop.

The development of the theme and the expression of the conceptions of HCI as a discipline – as craft, applied science and engineering – can usefully be employed to explicate issues raised by, and of concern to, the HCI community. Thus, Landauer’s complaint (Landauer [1987a]) that psychologists have not brought to HCI an impressive tool kit of design methods or principles can be understood as resulting from the disjunction between psychological principles explaining and predicting phenomena, and prescriptive design principles required to guarantee effective performance of work (see Section 3.2). Since research has primarily been directed at establishing the psychological principles, and not at validating the design guidelines, then the absence of an impressive tool kit of design methods or principles is perhaps not so surprising.

A further issue which can be explained concerns the relationship between HF and SE during system development. In particular, there is a complaint by SE that the contributions of HF to system development are ‘too little’, too late’ and unemployable (Walsh, Lim, Long, & Carver [1988]). Assuming HCI to be an applied science discipline, HF contributions are too little because psychology does not address the general problem of design and so fails to provide a set of principles for the solution of that problem. HF contributions are too late, because they consist largely of evaluations of designs already implemented, but without the benefit of HF. They are unemployable, because they were never specified, and because implemented designs can be difficult, if not impossible, and costly to modify. Within an HCI engineering discipline, HF contributions would be adequate (because within the scope of the discipline’s problem); on time (because specifiable); and implementable (because specified). Landauer’s plea (Landauer [1987b]) that HF should extend its practice from implementation evaluation to user requirements identification and the creation of designs to satisfy those requirements can be similarly explicated.

Lastly, Carroll and Campbell’s claim (Carroll & Campbell [1988]) that HCI research has been more successful at developing methodology than theory can be explicated by the need for guidelines to express psychological knowledge and the need to validate those guidelines formally, and the absence of engineering principles, plus the importation of psychology research methods into HCI and the simulation of good (craft) practice. The methodologies, however, are not methodological principles which guarantee the solution of the design problem (Dowell & Long [manuscript submitted for publication]), but procedures to be tailored anew in the manner of a craft discipline. Thus, relating the conceptions of HCI as a set of possible disciplines provides insight into whether HCI research has been more successful at developing methodologies than theories. 21

In addition to explicating issues already formulated, the development of the Conference theme and the expression of the conceptions of HCI as a discipline raise two novel issues. The first concerns reflexivity both with respect to the general design problem and with respect to the creation of discipline knowledge. It is often assumed that only HCI as an applied scientific discipline (by means of guidelines) and as an engineering discipline (by means of principles) are reflexive with respect to the general design problem. The conception of HCI as a craft discipline, however, has shown that it is similarly reflexive – by means of heuristics. Concerning the creation of discipline knowledge, it is often assumed that only the solution of the general discipline problem requires the reflexive cognitive act – of reason and intuition concerning the objects of activity (Kant [1781]). However, the conceptions of HCI as a craft discipline, as an applied science discipline, and as an engineering discipline suggest that the intial creation of discipline knowledge, whether heuristics, guidelines or principles, in all cases requires a reflexive cognitive act involving intuition and reason. Thus, contrary to common assumption, the craft, applied science, and engineering conceptions of the discipline of HCI are similarly reflexive with regard to the general design problem. The intial generation of albeit different discipline knowledges requires in each case the reflexive cognitive act of reason and intuition.

The second novel issue raised by the development of the Conference theme and the conceptions of HCI as a discipline is the relationship between the different conceptions. For example, the different conceptions of HCI and their associated paradigm activities might be considered to be mutually exclusive and uninformative, one with respect to the other. Alternatively, one conception and its associated activities might be considered to be mutually supportive with respect to another. For example, engineering principles might be developed bottom-up on the basis of inductions from good craft practice. Alternatively, engineering principles might be developed top-down on the basis of deductions from scientific theory – both from psychology and from computer science. It would be possible to advance a rationale justifying either mutual exclusion of conceptions or mutual support. The case for mutual exclusion would be based on the fact that the form of their knowledge and practice differs, and so one conception would be unable directly to inform another. For example, craft practice will not develop a theory which can be directly assimilated to science; science will not develop design principles which can be directly recruited to engineering. Thus, the case for mutual exclusion is strong.

However, there is a case for mutual support of conceptions and it is presented here as a final conclusion. The case is based on the claim made earlier that the creation of discipline knowledge of each conception of HCI requires a reflexive cognitive act of reason and intuition. If the claim is accepted, the reflexive cognitive act of one conception might be usefully but indirectly informed by the discipline knowledge of another. For example, the design ideas, or heuristics, which formed part of the craft practice of Bornat and Thimbleby in the 1970s (Bornat & Thimbleby [1989]), undoubtedly contributed to Thimbleby’s more systematic formulation (Thimbleby [1984]) and the formal expression by Dix and Harrison (Dix & Harrison [1987]). Although the principles fail to address the effectiveness of work and so fail to qualify as HCI engineering principles, their development towards that end might be encouraged by mutual support from engineering conceptions of HCI. Likewise, scientific concepts such as compatibility (Long [1987]) may indirectly inform the development of principles relating users’ mental structures to the analytic structure of a domain of application (Long [1989]), and even provide an indirect rationalisation for the concepts themselves and their relations with other associated concepts. Mutual support of conceptions, as opposed to mutual exclusion, has two further advantages. First, it maximises the exploitation of what is known and practised in HCI. The current success of HCI is not such that it can afford to ignore potential contributions to its own advancement. Second, it encourages the notion of a community of HCI superordinate to that of any single discipline conception. The novelty and complexity of the enterprise of developing knowledge to support the solution of the general problem of designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively requires every encouragement for the establishment and maintenance of such a community. Thus, the mutual support of different conceptions of HCI as a discipline is recommended.

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J M Carroll & R L Campbell [1988], “Artifacts as Psychological Theories: the Case of Human Computer Interaction”, IBM research report, RC 13454(60225) 1/26/88, T.J. Watson Research Division Center, Yorktown Heights, NY. 10598.

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F I M Craik & R S Lockhart [1972], “Levels of Processing: A Framework for Memory Research”, Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behaviour, 11, 671-684.

A J Dix & M D Harrison [1987], “Formalising Models of Interaction in the Design of a Display Editor”, in Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT’87, H J Bullinger & B Shackel, (ed.s), North-Holland, Amsterdam, 409-414.

J Dowell & J B Long [1988], “Human-Computer Interaction Engineering”, in Designing End-User Interfaces, N Heaton & M Sinclair, eds., Pergamon Infotech, Oxford.

J Dowell & J B Long, “Towards a Conception for an Engineering Discipline of Human Factors”, (manuscript submitted for publication).

P Gilligan & J B Long [1984], “Videotext Technology: an Overview with Special Reference to Transaction Processing as an Interactive Service”, Behaviour and Information Technology, 3, 41-47.

N Hammond & L Allinson [1988], “Development and Evaluation of a CAL System for Non-Formal Domains: the Hitchhiker`s Guide to Cognition”, Computer Education, 12, 215-220.

N Hammond [1987], “Principles from the Psychology of Skill Acquisition”, in Applying Cognitive Psychology to User-Interface Design, M Gardiner & B Christie, eds., John Wiley and Sons, Chichester.

I Kant [1781], The Critique of Pure Reason, Second Edition, translated by Max Muller, Macmillan, London.

D Kapur & M Srivas [1988], “Computability and Implementability: Issues in Abstract Data Types,” Science of Computer Programming, Vol. 10.

T K Landauer [1987a], “Relations Between Cognitive Psychology and Computer System Design”, in Interfacing Thought: Cognitive Aspects of Human-Computer Interaction, J M Carroll, (ed.), MIT Press, Cambridge MA. 23

T K Landauer [1987b], “Psychology as Mother of Invention”, CHI SI. ACM-0-89791-213-6/84/0004/0333

J B Long [1989], “Cognitive Ergonomics and Human Computer Interaction: an Introduction”, in Cognitive Ergonomics and Human Computer Interaction, J B Long & A D Whitefield, eds., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

J Long [1987], “Cognitive Ergonomics and Human Computer Interaction”, in Psychology at Work, P Warr, eds., Penguin, England.

J M Mandler [1979], “Categorical and Schematic Organisation in Memory”, in Memory Organisation and Structure, C R Puff, ed., Academic Press, New York.

H H Pattee [1973], Hierarchy Theory: the Challenge of Complex Systems, Braziller, New York.

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D Scott [1976], “Logic and Programming”, Communications of ACM, 20, 634-641.

H Thimbleby [1984], “Generative User Engineering Principles for User Interface Design”, in Proceedings of the First IFIP Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT’84. Vol.2, B Shackel, ed., Elsevier Science, Amsterdam, 102-107.

E Tulving [1972], “Episodic and Semantic Memory”, in Organisation of Memory, E Tulving & N Donaldson, eds., Academic Press, New York.

P Walsh, K Y Lim, J B Long & M K Carver [1988], “Integrating Human Factors with System Development”, in Designing End-User Interfaces, N Heaton & M Sinclair, eds., Pergamon Infotech, Oxford.

Acknowledgement. This paper has greatly benefited from discussion with others and from their criticisms. In particular, we would like to thank: Andy Whitefield and Andrew Life, colleagues at the Ergonomics Unit, University College London; Charles Brennan of Cambridge University, and Michael Harrison of York University; and also those who attended a seminar presentation of many of these ideas at the MRC Applied Psychology Unit, Cambridge. The views expressed in the paper, however, are those of the authors.

 

1.1 General Conception of HCI Discipline 150 150 John

1.1 General Conception of HCI Discipline

The General Conception of the HCI Discipline  is generalised from the General Conception of the HCI Engineering Discipline . The General Conception comprises HCI knowledge, which  takes a variety of forms , distinguishing the interactive system of people  and computers, what it does and how well it does it.  The knowledge supports HCI practices of design and implementation of people using  computers to do something as wanted. This Conception is general  to any approach to HCI.

 

Key Concepts, Footnotes and Citations

The General Conception (F1) of the HCI Discipline (C1) is generalised from the General Conception of the HCI Engineering Discipline (1.2). The General Conception comprises HCI knowledge, which  takes a variety of forms (F2), distinguishing the interactive system of people  and computers, what it does and how well it does it. (C2) The knowledge supports HCI practices of design (F3) and implementation of people using  computers to do something as wanted. (C3) This Conception is general  to any approach to HCI.

Key concepts are shown in bold on their first appearance only.

Footnotes

(F1) ‘Conception’ is preferred here, as it clearly implies a set of linked concepts, which is what a conception is. However, within HCI more generally , ‘Framework’ would do as well.  Some might even prefer ‘Model’ or most generally ‘Approach’.

(F2) Such forms of knowledge include: guidelines; models; methods; heuristics etc.

(F3) Design here includes evaluation.

Citations

 Long and Dowell (1989)

(C1) ‘The framework expresses the essential characteristics of the HCI discipline and can be summarised as ‘ the use of HCI knowledge to support practices seeking solutions to the general problem of HCI’. (Page 9, Abstract, Lines 11-14)

(C2) ‘Second, the scope of the general problem of HCI is defined by reference to humans, computers, and the work they perform.’ (Page 9, Abstract, Lines 7-9)

(C3) ‘Most definitions assume three primary characteristics of disciplines: knowledge; practice; and a general problem.’ (Page 11, Lines 26 and 27)

Dowell and Long (1989) 150 150 John

Dowell and Long (1989)

 

Towards a Conception for an Engineering Discipline of Human Factors

John Dowell and John Long

Ergonomics Unit, University College London,

26, Bedford Way, London. WC1H 0AP.

abstract

This paper concerns one possible response of Human Factors to the need for better user-interactions of computer-based systems. The paper is in two parts. Part I examines the potential for Human Factors to formulate engineering principles. A basic pre-requisite for realising that potential is a conception of the general design problem addressed by Human Factors. The problem is expressed informally as: ‘to design human interactions with computers for effective working’. A conception would provide the set of related concepts which both expressed the general design problem more formally, and which might be embodied in engineering principles. Part II of the paper proposes such a conception and illustrates its concepts. It is offered as an initial and speculative step towards a conception for an engineering discipline of Human Factors.

In P. Barber and J. Laws (ed.s) Special Issue on Cognitive Ergonomics, Ergonomics, 1989, vol. 32, no. 11, pp. 1613-1536. Dowell and Long 2

Part I. Requirement for Human Factors as an Engineering Discipline of Human-Computer Interaction

1.1 Introduction…………………………………………………………………………………………….2

1.2. Characterisation of the Human Factors Discipline…………………………………..3

1.3. State of the Human Factors Art………………………………………………………………..5

1.4. Human Factors Engineering Principles……………………………………………………7

1.5. The Requirement for an Engineering Conception for Human Factors…………………………………………………………………………………..11

1.1. Introduction

Advances in computer technology continue to raise expectations for the effectiveness of its applications. No longer is it sufficient for computer-based systems simply ‘to work’, but rather, their contribution to the success of the organisations utilising them is now under scrutiny (Didner, 1988). Consequently, views of organisational effectiveness must be extended to take account of the (often unacceptable) demands made on people interacting with computers to perform work, and the needs of those people. Any technical support for such views must be similarly extended (Cooley, 1980).

With recognition of the importance of ‘human-computer interactions’ as a determinant of effectiveness (Long, Hammond, Barnard, and Morton, 1983), Cognitive Ergonomics is emerging as a new and specialist activity of Ergonomics or Human Factors (HF). Throughout this paper, HF is to be understood as a discipline which includes Cognitive Ergonomics, but only as it addresses human-computer interactions. This usage is contrasted with HF as a discipline which more generally addresses human-machine interactions.

HF seeks to support the development of more effective computer-based systems. However, it has yet to prove itself in this respect, and moreover, the adequacy of the HF response to the need for better human-computer interactions is of concern. For it continues to be the case that interactions result from relatively ad hoc design activities to which may be attributed, at least in part, the frequent ineffectiveness of systems (Thimbleby, 1984).

This paper is concerned to develop one possible response of HF to the need for better human-computer interactions. It is in two parts. Part I examines the potential for HF to formulate HF engineering principles for supporting its better response. Pre-requisite to the realisation of that potential, it concludes, is a conception of the general design problem it addresses. Part II of the paper is a proposal for such a conception.

The structure of the paper is as follows. Part I first presents a characterisation of HF (Section 1.2) with regard to: the general design problem it addresses; its practices providing solutions to that problem; and its knowledge supporting those practices. The characterisation identifies the relations of HF with Software Engineering (SE) and with the super-ordinate discipline of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI). The characterisation supports both the assessment of contemporary HF and the arguments for the requirement of an engineering HF discipline.

Assessment of contemporary HF (Section 1.3.) concludes that its practices are predominantly those of a craft. Shortcomings of those practices are exposed which indict the absence of support from appropriate formal discipline knowledge. This absence prompts the question as to what might be the Dowell and Long 3

formal knowledge which HF could develop, and what might be the process of its formulation. By comparing the HF general design problem with other, better understood, general design problems, and by identifying the formal knowledge possessed by the corresponding disciplines, the potential for HF engineering principles is suggested (Section 1.4.).

However, a pre-requisite for the formulation of any engineering principle is a conception. A conception is a unitary (and consensus) view of a general design problem; its power lies in the coherence and completeness of its definition of the concepts which can express that problem. Engineering principles are articulated in terms of those concepts. Hence, the requirement for a conception for the HF discipline is concluded (Section 1.5.).

If HF is to be a discipline of the superordinate discipline of HCI, then the origin of a ‘conception for HF’ needs to be in a conception for the discipline of HCI itself. A conception (at least in form) as might be assumed by an engineering HCI discipline has been previously proposed (Dowell and Long, 1988a). It supports the conception for HF as an engineering discipline of HCI presented in Part II.

1.2. Characterisation of the Human Factors Discipline

HF seeks to support systems development through the systematic and reasoned design of human-computer interactions. As an endeavour, however, HF is still in its infancy, seeking to establish its identity and its proper contribution to systems development. For example, there is little consensus on how the role of HF in systems development is, or should be, configured with the role of SE (Walsh, Lim, Long, and Carver, 1988). A characterisation of the HF discipline is needed to clarify our understanding of both its current form and any conceivable future form. A framework supporting such a characterisation is summarised below (following Long and Dowell, 1989).

Most definitions of disciplines assume three primary characteristics: a general problem; practices, providing solutions to that problem; and knowledge, supporting those practices. This characterisation presupposes classes of general problem corresponding with types of discipline. For example, one class of general problem is that of the general design problem1 and includes the design of artefacts (of bridges, for example) and the design of ‘states of the world’ (of public administration, for example). Engineering and craft disciplines address general design problems.

Further consideration also suggests that any general problem has the necessary property of a scope, delimiting the province of concern of the associated discipline. Hence may disciplines also be distinguished from each other; for example, the engineering disciplines of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering are distinguished by their respective scopes of electrical and mechanical artefacts. So, knowledge possessed by Electrical Engineering supports its practices solving the general design problem of designing electrical artefacts (for example, Kirchoff’s Laws would support the analysis of branch currents for a given network design for an amplifier’s power supply).

Although rudimentary, this framework can be used to provide a characterisation of the HF discipline. It also allows a distinction to be made between the disciplines of HF and SE. First, however, it is required that the super-ordinate discipline of HCI be postulated. Thus, HCI is a discipline addressing a general design problem expressed informally as:

‘to design human-computer interactions for effective working’.

The scope of the HCI general design problem includes: humans, both as individuals, as groups, and as social organisations; computers, both as programmable machines, stand-alone and networked, and as functionally embedded devices within machines; and work, both with regard to individuals and the organisations in which it occurs (Long, 1989). For example, the general design problem of HCI

1They are to be distinguished from the class of general scientific problem of the explanation and prediction of phenomena. Dowell and Long 4

includes the problems of designing the effective use of navigation systems by aircrew on flight-decks, and the effective use of wordprocessors by secretaries in offices.

The general design problem of HCI can be decomposed into two general design problems, each having a particular scope. Whilst subsumed within the general design problem of HCI, these two general design problems are expressed informally as:

‘to design human interactions with computers for effective working’; and

‘to design computer interactions with humans for effective working’.

Each general design problem can be associated with a different discipline of the superordinate discipline of HCI. HF addresses the former, SE addresses the latter. With different – though complementary – aims, both disciplines address the design of human-computer interactions for effective working. The HF discipline concerns the physical and mental aspects of the human interacting with the computer. The SE discipline concerns the physical and software aspects of the computer interacting with the human.

The practices of HF and SE are the activities providing solutions to their respective general design problems and are supported by their respective discipline knowledge. Figure 1 shows schematically this characterisation of HF as a sub-discipline of HCI (following Long and Dowell, 1989). The following section employs the characterisation to evaluate contemporary HF.

1.3. State of the Human Factors Art

It would be difficult to reject the claim that the contemporary HF discipline has the character of a craft (at times even of a technocratic art). Its practices can justifiably be described as a highly refined form of design by ‘trial and error’ (Long and Dowell, 1989). Characteristic of a craft, the execution and success of its practices in systems development depends principally on the expertise, guided intuition and accumulated experience which the practitioner brings to bear on the design problem1.

It is also claimed that HF will always be a craft: that ultimately only the mind itself has the capability for reasoning about mental states, and for solving the under-specified and complex problem of designing user-interactions (see Carey, 1989); that only the designer’s mind can usefully infer the motivations underlying purposeful human behaviour, or make subjective assessments of the elegance or aesthetics of a computer interface (Bornat and Thimbleby, 1989).

The dogma of HF as necessarily a craft whose knowledge may only be the accrued experience of its practitioners, is nowhere presented rationally. Notions of the indeterminism, or the un-predictability of human behaviour are raised simply as a gesture. Since the dogma has support, it needs to be challenged to establish the extent to which it is correct, or to which it compels a misguided and counter-productive doctrine (see also, Carroll and Campbell, 1986).

Current HF practices exhibit four primary deficiencies which prompt the need to identify alternative forms for HF. First, HF practices are in general poorly integrated into systems development practices, nullifying the influence they might otherwise exert. Developers make implicit and explicit decisions with implications for user-interactions throughout the development process, typically without involving HF specialists. At an early stage of design, HF may offer only advice – advice which may all too easily be ignored and so not implemented. Its main contribution to the development of user-interactive systems is the evaluations it provides. Yet these are too often relegated to the closing stages of development programmes, where they can only suggest minor enhancements to completed designs because of the prohibitive costs of even modest re-implementations (Walsh et al,1988).

Second, HF practices have a suspect efficacy. Their contribution to improving product quality in any instance remains highly variable. Because there is no guarantee that experience of one development programme is appropriate or complete in its recruitment to another, re-application of that experience cannot be assured of repeated success (Long and Dowell, 1989).

Third, HF practices are inefficient. Each development of a system requires the solving of new problems by implementation then testing. There is no formal structure within which experience accumulated in the successful development of previous systems can be recruited to support solutions to the new problems, except through the memory and intuitions of the designer. These may not be shared by others, except indirectly (for example, through the formulation of heuristics), and so experience may be lost and may have to be re-acquired (Long and Dowell, 1989).

1The claimed craft status of HF practice remains unaffected by the counterclaim that science and, in particular, psychology, offers guidance to the designer. The guidance may be direct – by the designer’s familiarity with psychological theory and practice, or may be indirect by means of guidelines derived from psychological findings. In both cases, the guidance can offer only advice which must be implemented then tested to assess its effectiveness. Since the general scientific problem is the explanation and prediction of phenomena, and not the design of artifacts, the guidance cannot be directly embodied in design specifications which offer a guarantee with respect to the effectiveness of the implemented design. It is not being claimed here that the application of psychology directly or indirectly cannot contribute to better practice or to better designs, only that a practice supported in such a manner remains a craft, because its practice is by implementation then test, that is, by trial and error (see also Long and Dowell, 1989). Dowell and Long 6

Fourth, there are insufficient signs of systematic and intentional progress which will alleviate the three deficiencies of HF practices cited above. The lack of progress is particularly noticeable when HF is compared with the similarly nascent discipline of SE (Gries, 1981; Morgan, Shorter and Tainsh, 1988).

These four deficiencies are endemic to the craft nature of contemporary HF practice. They indict the tacit HF discipline knowledge consisting of accumulated experience embodied in procedures, even where that experience has been influenced by guidance offered by the science of psychology (see earlier footnote). Because the knowledge is tacit (i.e., implicit or informal), it cannot be operationalised, and hence the role of HF in systems development cannot be planned as would be necessary for the proper integration of the knowledge. Without being operationalised, its knowledge cannot be tested, and so the efficacy of the practices it supports cannot be guaranteed. Without being tested, its knowledge cannot be generalised for new applications and so the practices it can support will be inefficient. Without being operationalised, testable, and general, the knowledge cannot be developed in any structured way as required for supporting the systematic and intentional progress of the HF discipline.

It would be incorrect to assume the current absence of formality of HF knowledge to be a necessary response to the indeterminism of human behaviour. Both tacit discipline knowledge and ‘trial and error’ practices may simply be symptomatic of the early stage of development of the discipline1. The extent to which human behaviour is deterministic for the purposes of designing interactive computer-based systems needs to be independently established. Only then might it be known if HF discipline knowledge could be formal. Section 1.4. considers what form that knowledge might take, and Section 1.5. considers what might be the process of its formulation.

1.4. Human Factors Engineering Principles

HF has been viewed earlier (Section 1.2.) as comparable to other disciplines which address general design problems: for example, Civil Engineering and Health Administration. The nature of the formal knowledge of a future HF discipline might, then, be suggested by examining such disciplines. The general design problems of different disciplines, however, must first be related to their characteristic practices, in order to relate the knowledge supporting those practices. The establishment of this relationship follows.

The ‘design’ disciplines are ranged according to the ‘hardness’ or ‘softness’ of their respective general design problems. ‘Hard’ and ‘soft’ may have various meanings in this context. For example, hard design problems may be understood as those which include criteria for their ‘optimal’ solution (Checkland, 1981). In contrast, soft design problems are those which do not include such criteria. Any solution is assessed as ‘better or worse’ relative to other solutions. Alternatively, the hardness of a problem may be distinguished by its level of description, or the formality of the knowledge available for its specification (Carroll and Campbell, 1986). However, here hard and soft problems will be generally distinguished by their determinism for the purpose, that is, by the need for design solutions to be determinate. In this distinction between problems is implicated: the proliferation of variables expressed in a problem and their relations; the changes of variables and their relations, both with regard to their values and their number; and more generally, complexity, where it includes factors other than those identified. The variables implicated in the HF general design problem are principally those of human behaviours and structures.

A discipline’s practices construct solutions to its general design problem. Consideration of disciplines indicates much variation in their use of specification as a practice in constructing solutions.

1 Such was the history of many disciplines: the origin of modern day Production Engineering, for example, was a nineteenth century set of craft practices and tacit knowledge. Dowell and Long 7

This variation, however, appears not to be dependent on variations in the hardness of the general design problems. Rather, disciplines appear to differ in the completeness with which they specify solutions to their respective general design problems before implementation occurs. At one extreme, some disciplines specify solutions completely before implementation: their practices may be described as ‘specify then implement’ (an example might be Electrical Engineering). At the other extreme, disciplines appear not to specify their solutions at all before implementing them: their practices may be described as ‘implement and test’ (an example might be Graphic Design). Other disciplines, such as SE, appear characteristically to specify solutions partially before implementing them: their practices may be described as ‘specify and implement’. ‘Specify then Implement’, therefore, and ‘implement and test’, would appear to represent the extremes of a dimension by which disciplines may be distinguished by their practices. It is a dimension of the completeness with which they specify design solutions.

 

Taken together, the dimension of problem hardness, characterising general design problems, and the dimension of specification completeness, characterising discipline practices, constitute a classification space for design disciplines such as Electrical Engineering and Graphic Design. The space is shown in Figure 2, including for illustrative purposes, the speculative location of SE.

Two conclusions are prompted by Figure 2. First, a general relation may be apparent between the hardness of a general design problem and the realiseable completeness with which its solutions might be specified. In particular, a boundary condition is likely to be present beyond which more complete solutions could not be specified for a problem of given hardness. The shaded area of Figure 2 is intended to indicate this condition, termed the ‘Boundary of Determinism’ – because it derives from the determinism of the phenomena implicated in the general design problem. It suggests that whilst Dowell and Long 8

very soft problems may only be solved by ‘implement and test’ practices, hard problems may be solved by ‘specify then implement’ practices.

Second, it is concluded from Figure 2 that the actual completeness with which solutions to a general design problem are specified, and the realiseable completeness, might be at variance. Accordingly, there may be different possible forms of the same discipline – each form addressing the same problem but with characteristically different practices. With reference to HF then, the contemporary discipline, a craft, will characteristically solve the HF general design problem mainly by ‘implementation and testing’. If solutions are specified at all, they will be incomplete before being implemented. Yet depending on the hardness of the HF general design problem, the realiseable completeness of specified solutions may be greater and a future form of the discipline, with practices more characteristically those of ‘specify then implement’, may be possible. For illustrative purposes, those different forms of the HF discipline are located speculatively in the figure.

Whilst the realiseable completeness with which a discipline may specify design solutions is governed by the hardness of the general design problem, the actual completeness with which it does so is governed by the formality of the knowledge it possesses. Consideration of the traditional engineering disciplines supports this assertion. Their modern-day practices are characteristically those of ‘specify then implement’, yet historically, their antecedents were ‘specify and implement’ practices, and earlier still – ‘implement and test’ practices. For example, the early steam engine preceded formal knowledge of thermodynamics and was constructed by ‘implementation and testing’. Yet designs of thermodynamic machines are now relatively completely specified before being implemented, a practice supported by formal knowledge. Such progress then, has been marked by the increasing formality of knowledge. It is also in spite of the increasing complexity of new technology – an increase which might only have served to make the general design problem more soft, and the boundary of determinism more constraining. The dimension of the formality of a discipline’s knowledge – ranging from experience to principles, is shown in Figure 2 and completes the classification space for design disciplines.

It should be clear from Figure 2 that there exists no pre-ordained relationship between the formality of a discipline’s knowledge and the hardness of its general design problem. In particular, the practices of a (craft) discipline supported by experience – that is, by informal knowledge – may address a hard problem. But also, within the boundary of determinism, that discipline could acquire formal knowledge to support specification as a design practice.

In Section 1.3, four deficiencies of the contemporary HF discipline were identified. The absence of formal discipline knowledge was proposed to account for these deficiencies. The present section has been concerned to examine the potential for HF to develop a more formal discipline knowledge. The potential would appear to be governed by the hardness of the HF general design problem, that is, by the determinism of the human behaviours which it implicates, at least with respect to any solution of that problem. And clearly, human behaviour is, in some respects and to some degree, deterministic. For example, drivers’ behaviour on the roads is determined, at least within the limits required by a particular design solution, by traffic system protocols. A training syllabus determines, within the limits required by a particular solution, the behaviour of the trainees – both in terms of learning strategies and the level of training required. Hence, formal HF knowledge is to some degree attainable. At the very least, it cannot be excluded that the model for that formal knowledge is the knowledge possessed by the established engineering disciplines.

Generally, the established engineering disciplines possess formal knowledge: a corpus of operationalised, tested, and generalised principles. Those principles are prescriptive, enabling the complete specification of design solutions before those designs are implemented (see Dowell and Long, 1988b). This theme of prescription in design is central to the thesis offered here.

Engineering principles can be substantive or methodological (see Checkland, 1981; Pirsig, 1974). Methodological Principles prescribe the methods for solving a general design problem optimally. For example, methodological principles might prescribe the representations of designs specified at a general level of description and procedures for systematically decomposing those representations Dowell and Long 9

until complete specification is possible at a level of description of immediate design implementation (Hubka, Andreason and Eder, 1988). Methodological principles would assure each lower level of specification as being a complete representation of an immediately higher level.

Substantive Principles prescribe the features and properties of artefacts, or systems that will constitute an optimal solution to a general design problem. As a simple example, a substantive principle deriving from Kirchoff’s Laws might be one which would specify the physical structure of a network design (sources, resistances and their nodes etc) whose behaviour (e.g., distribution of current) would constitute an optimal solution to a design problem concerning an amplifier’s power supply.

1.5. The Requirement for an Engineering Conception for Human Factors

The contemporary HF discipline does not possess either methodological or substantive engineering principles. The heuristics it possesses are either ‘rules of thumb’ derived from experience or guidelines derived from psychological theories and findings. Neither guidelines nor rules of thumb offer assurance of their efficacy in any given instance, and particularly with regard to the effectiveness of a design. The methods and models of HF (as opposed to methodological and substantive principles) are similarly without such an assurance. Clearly, any evolution of HF as an engineering discipline in the manner proposed here has yet to begin. There is an immediate need then, for a view of how it might begin, and how formulation of engineering principles might be precipitated.

van Gisch and Pipino (1986) have suggested the process by which scientific (as opposed to engineering) disciplines acquire formal knowledge. They characterise the activities of scientific disciplines at a number of levels, the most general being an epistemological enquiry concerning the nature and origin of discipline knowledge. From such an enquiry a paradigm may evolve. Although a paradigm may be considered to subsume all discipline activities (Long, 1987), it must, at the very least, subsume a coherent and complete definition of the concepts which in this case describe the General (Scientific) Problem of a scientific discipline. Those concepts, and their derivatives, are embodied in the explanatory and predictive theories of science and enable the formulation of research problems. For example, Newton’s Principia commences with an epistemological enquiry, and a paradigm in which the concept of inertia first occurs. The concept of inertia is embodied in scientific theories of mechanics, as for example, in Newton’s Second Law.

Engineering disciplines may be supposed to require an equivalent epistemological enquiry. However, rather than that enquiry producing a paradigm, we may construe its product as a conception. Such a conception is a unitary (and consensus) view of the general design problem of a discipline. Its power lies in the coherence and completeness of its definition of concepts which express that problem. Hence, it enables the formulation of engineering principles which embody and instantiate those concepts. A conception (like a paradigm) is always open to rejection and replacement.

HF currently does not possess a conception of its general design problem. Current views of the issue are ill-formed, fragmentary, or implicit (Shneiderman, 1980; Card, Moran and Newell, 1983; Norman and Draper, 1986). The lack of such a shared view is particularly apparent within the HF research literature in which concepts are ambiguous and lacking in coherence; those associated with the ‘interface’ (eg, ‘virtual objects’, ‘human performance’, ‘task semantics’, ‘user error’ etc) are particular examples of this failure. It is inconceiveable that a formulation of HF engineering principles might occur whilst there is no consensus understanding of the concepts which they would embody. Articulation of a conception must then be a pre-requisite for formulation of engineering principles for HF. Dowell and Long 10

The origin of a conception for the HF discipline must be a conception for the HCI discipline itself, the superordinate discipline incorporating HF. A conception (at least in form) as might be assumed by an engineering HCI discipline has been previously proposed (Dowell and Long, 1988a). It supports the conception for HF as an engineering discipline presented in Part II.

In conclusion, Part I has presented the case for an engineering conception for HF. A proposal for such a conception follows in Part II. The status of the conception, however, should be emphasised. First, the conception at this point in time is speculative. Second, the conception continues to be developed in support of, and supported by, the research of the authors. Third, there is no validation in the conventional sense to be offered for the conception at this time. Validation of the conception for HF will come from its being able to describe the design problems of HF, and from the coherence of its concepts, that is, from the continuity of relations, and agreement, between concepts. Readers may assess these aspects of validity for themselves. Finally, the validity of the conception for HF will also rest in its being a consensus view held by the discipline as a whole and this is currently not the case. Dowell and Long 11

Part II. Conception for an Engineering Discipline of Human Factors

2.1. Conception of the Human Factors General Design Problem……………………………………………………………………………………….13

2.2 . Conception of Work and the User……………………………………………………………15

2.3. Conception of the Interactive Worksystem and the User……………………………………………………………………………………………………18

2.4. Conception of Performance of the Interactive Worksystem and the User………………………………………………………………………..24

2.5. Conclusions and the Prospect for Human Factors Engineering Principles.26

The potential for HF to become an engineering discipline, and so better to respond to the problem of interactive systems design, was examined in Part I. The possibility of realising this potential through HF engineering principles was suggested – principles which might prescriptively support HF design expressed as ‘specify then implement’. It was concluded that a pre-requisite to the development of HF engineering principles, is a conception of the general design problem of HF, which was informally expressed as:

‘to design human interactions with computers for effective working’.

Part II proposes a conception for HF. It attempts to establish the set of related concepts which can express the general design problem of HF more formally. Such concepts would be those embodied in HF engineering principles. As indicated in Section 1.1, the conception for HF is supported by a conception for an engineering discipline of HCI earlier proposed by Dowell and Long (1988a). Space precludes re-iteration of the conception for HCI here, other than as required for the derivation of the conception for HF. Part II first asserts a more formal expression of the HF general design problem which an engineering discipline would address. Part II then continues by elaborating and illustrating the concepts and their relations embodied in that expression.

2.1. Conception of the Human Factors General Design Problem.

The conception for the (super-ordinate) engineering discipline of HCI asserts a fundamental distinction between behavioural systems which perform work, and a world in which work originates, is performed and has its consequences. Specifically conceptualised are interactive worksystems consisting of human and computer behaviours together performing work. It is work evidenced in a world of physical and informational objects disclosed as domains of application. The distinction between worksystems and domains of application is represented schematically in Figure 3. Dowell and Long 12

 

Effectiveness derives from the relationship of an interactive worksystem with its domain of application – it assimilates both the quality of the work performed by the worksystem, and the costs it incurs. Quality and cost are the primary constituents of the concept of performance through which effectiveness is expressed.

The concern of an engineering HCI discipline would be the design of interactive worksystems for performance. More precisely, its concern would be the design of behaviours constituting a worksystem {S} whose actual performance (PA) conformed with some desired performance (PD). And to design {S} would require the design of human behaviours {U} interacting with computer behaviours {C}. Hence, conception of the general design problem of an engineering discipline of HCI is expressed as:

Specify then implement {U} and {C}, such that

{U} interacting with {C} = {S}as PAPD

where PD = fn. { QD ,KD }

QD expresses the desired quality of the products of work within the given domain of application,

KD expresses acceptable (i.e., desired) costs incurred by the worksystem, i.e., by both human and computer.

The problem, when expressed as one of to ‘specify then implement’ designs of interactive worksystems, is equivalent to the general design problems characteristic of other engineering disciplines (see Section 1.4.).

The interactive worksystem can be distinguished as two separate, but interacting sub-systems, that is, a system of human behaviours interacting with a system of computer behaviours. The human behaviours may be treated as a behavioural system in their own right, but one interacting with the system of computer behaviours to perform work. It follows that the general design problem of HCI may be decomposed with regard to its scope (with respect to the human and computer behavioural Dowell and Long 13

sub-systems) giving two related problems. Decomposition with regard to the human behaviours gives the general design problem of the HF1 discipline as:

Specify then implement {U} such that

{U} interacting with {C} = {S}as PAPD

The general design problem of HF then, is one of producing implementable specifications of human behaviours {U} which, interacting with computer behaviours {C}, are constituted within a worksystem {S} whose performance conforms with a desired performance (PD).

The following sections elaborate the conceptualisation of human behaviours (the user, or users) with regard to the work they perform, the interactive worksystem in which they are constituted, and performance.

2.2 . Conception of Work and the User

The conception for HF identifies a world in which work originates, is performed and has its consequences. This section presents the concepts by which work and its relations with the user are expressed.

Objects and their attributes

Work occurs in a world consisting of objects and arises in the intersection of organisations and (computer) technology. Objects may be both abstract as well as physical, and are characterised by their attributes. Abstract attributes of objects are attributes of information and knowledge. Physical attributes are attributes of energy and matter. Letters (i.e., correspondence) are objects; their abstract attributes support the communication of messages etc; their physical attributes support the visual/verbal representation of information via language.

Attributes and levels of complexity

The different attributes of an object may emerge at different levels within a hierarchy of levels of complexity (see Checkland, 1981). For example, characters and their configuration on a page are physical attributes of the object ‘a letter’ which emerge at one level of complexity; the message of the letter is an abstract attribute which emerges at a higher level of complexity.

Objects are described at different levels of description commensurate with their levels of complexity. However, at a high level of description, separate objects may no longer be differentiated. For example, the object ‘income tax return’ and the object ‘personal letter’ are both ‘correspondence’ objects at a higher level of description. Lower levels of description distinguish their respective attributes of content, intended correspondent etc. In this way, attributes of an object described at one level of description completely re-represent those described at a lower level.

Relations between attributes

Attributes of objects are related, and in two ways. First, attributes at different levels of complexity are related. As indicated earlier, those at one level are completely subsumed in those at a higher level. In particular, abstract attributes will occur at higher levels of complexity than physical attributes and will subsume those lower level physical attributes. For example, the abstract attributes of an object ‘message’ concerning the representation of its content by language subsume the lower level physical attributes, such as the font of the characters expressing the language. As an alternative example, an

1The General Design Problem of SE would be equivalent and be expressed as ‘Specify then implement {C} such that .. etc. Dowell and Long 14

industrial process, such as a steel rolling process in a foundry, is an object whose abstract attributes will include the process’s efficiency. Efficiency subsumes physical attributes of the process, – its power consumption, rate of output, dimensions of the output (the rolled steel), etc – emerging at a lower level of complexity.

Second, attributes of objects are related within levels of complexity. There is a dependency between the attributes of an object emerging within the same level of complexity. For example, the attributes of the industrial process of power consumption and rate of output emerge at the same level and are inter-dependent.

Attribute states and affordance

At any point or event in the history of an object, each of its attributes is conceptualised as having a state. Further, those states may change. For example, the content and characters (attributes) of a letter (object) may change state: the content with respect to meaning and grammar etc; its characters with respect to size and font etc. Objects exhibit an affordance for transformation, engendered by their attributes’ potential for state change (see Gibson, 1977). Affordance is generally pluralistic in the sense that there may be many, or even, infinite transformations of objects, according to the potential changes of state of their attributes.

Attributes’ relations are such that state changes of one attribute may also manifest state changes in related attributes, whether within the same level of complexity, or across different levels of complexity. For example, changing the rate of output of an industrial process (lower level attribute) will change both its power consumption (same level attribute) and its efficiency (higher level attribute).

Organisations, domains (of application), and the requirement for attribute state changes

A domain of application may be conceptualised as: ‘a class of affordance of a class of objects’. Accordingly, an object may be associated with a number of domains of application (‘domains’). The object ‘book’ may be associated with the domain of typesetting (state changes of its layout attributes) and with the domain of authorship (state changes of its textual content). In principle, a domain may have any level of generality, for example, the writing of letters and the writing of a particular sort of letter.

Organisations are conceptualised as having domains as their operational province and of requiring the realisation of the affordance of objects. It is a requirement satisfied through work. Work is evidenced in the state changes of attributes by which an object is intentionally transformed: it produces transforms, that is, objects whose attributes have an intended state. For example, ‘completing a tax return’ and ‘writing to an acquaintance’, each have a ‘letter’ as their transform, where those letters are objects whose attributes (their content, format and status, for example) have an intended state. Further editing of those letters would produce additional state changes, and therein, new transforms.

Goals

Organisations express their requirement for the transformation of objects through specifying goals. A product goal specifies a required transform – a required realisation of the affordance of an object. In expressing the required transformation of an object, a product goal will generally suppose necessary state changes of many attributes. The requirement of each attribute state change can be expressed as a task goal, deriving from the product goal. So for example, the product goal demanding transformation of a letter making its message more courteous, would be expressed by task goals possibly requiring state changes of semantic attributes of the propositional structure of the text, and of syntactic attributes of the grammatical structure. Hence, a product goal can be re-expressed as a task goal structure, a hierarchical structure expressing the relations between task goals, for example, their sequences. Dowell and Long 15

In the case of the computer-controlled steel rolling process, the process is an object whose transformation is required by a foundry organisation and expressed by a product goal. For example, the product goal may specify the elimination of deviations of the process from a desired efficiency. As indicated earlier, efficiency will at least subsume the process’s attributes of power consumption, rate of output, dimensions of the output (the rolled steel), etc. As also indicated earlier, those attributes will be inter-dependent such that state changes of one will produce state changes in the others – for example, changes in rate of output will also change the power consumption and the efficiency of the process. In this way, the product goal (of correcting deviations from the desired efficiency) supposes the related task goals (of setting power consumption, rate of output, dimensions of the output etc). Hence, the product goal can be expressed as a task goal structure and task goals within it will be assigned to the operator monitoring the process.

Quality

The transformation of an object demanded by a product goal will generally be of a multiplicity of attribute state changes – both within and across levels of complexity. Consequently, there may be alternative transforms which would satisfy a product goal – letters with different styles, for example – where those different transforms exhibit differing compromises between attribute state changes of the object. By the same measure, there may also be transforms which will be at variance with the product goal. The concept of quality (Q) describes the variance of an actual transform with that specified by a product goal. It enables all possible outcomes of work to be equated and evaluated.

Work and the user

Conception of the domain then, is of objects, characterised by their attributes, and exhibiting an affordance arising from the potential changes of state of those attributes. By specifying product goals, organisations express their requirement for transforms – objects with specific attribute states. Transforms are produced through work, which occurs only in the conjunction of objects affording transformation and systems capable of producing a transformation.

From product goals derive a structure of related task goals which can be assigned either to the human or to the computer (or both) within an associated worksystem. The task goals assigned to the human are those which motivate the human’s behaviours. The actual state changes (and therein transforms) which those behaviours produce may or may not be those specified by task and product goals, a difference expressed by the concept of quality.

Taken together, the concepts presented in this section support the HF conception’s expression of work as relating to the user. The following section presents the concepts expressing the interactive worksystem as relating to the user.

2.3. Conception of the Interactive Worksystem and the User.

The conception for HF identifies interactive worksystems consisting of human and computer behaviours together performing work. This section presents the concepts by which interactive worksystems and the user are expressed.

Interactive worksystems

Humans are able to conceptualise goals and their corresponding behaviours are said to be intentional (or purposeful). Computers, and machines more generally, are designed to achieve goals, and their corresponding behaviours are said to be intended (or purposive1). An interactive worksystem

1 Human behaviour is teleological, machine behaviour is teleonomic (Checkland, 1981). Dowell and Long 16

(‘worksystem’) is a behavioural system distinguished by a boundary enclosing all human and computer behaviours whose purpose is to achieve and satisfy a common goal. For example, the behaviours of a secretary and wordprocessor whose purpose is to produce letters constitute a worksystem. Critically, it is only by identifying that common goal that the boundary of the worksystem can be established: entities, and more so – humans, may exhibit a range of contiguous behaviours, and only by specifying the goals of concern, might the boundary of the worksystem enclosing all relevant behaviours be correctly identified.

Worksystems transform objects by producing state changes in the abstract and physical attributes of those objects (see Section 2.2). The secretary and wordprocessor may transform the object ‘correspondence’ by changing both the attributes of its meaning and the attributes of its layout. More generally, a worksystem may transform an object through state changes produced in related attributes. An operator monitoring a computer-controlled industrial process may change the efficiency of the process through changing its rate of output.

The behaviours of the human and computer are conceptualised as behavioural sub-systems of the worksystem – sub-systems which interact1. The human behavioural sub-system is here more appropriately termed the user. Behaviour may be loosely understood as ‘what the human does’, in contrast with ‘what is done’ (i.e. attribute state changes in a domain). More precisely the user is conceptualised as:

a system of distinct and related human behaviours, identifiable as the sequence of states of a person2 interacting with a computer to perform work, and corresponding with a purposeful (intentional) transformation of objects in a domain3 (see also Ashby, 1956).

Although possible at many levels, the user must at least be expressed at a level commensurate with the level of description of the transformation of objects in the domain. For example, a secretary interacting with an electronic mailing facility is a user whose behaviours include receiving and replying to messages. An operator interacting with a computer-controlled milling machine is a user whose behaviours include planning the tool path to produce a component of specified geometry and tolerance.

The user as a system of mental and physical human behaviours

The behaviours constituting a worksystem are both physical as well as abstract. Abstract behaviours are generally the acquisition, storage, and transformation of information. They represent and process information at least concerning: domain objects and their attributes, attribute relations and attribute states, and the transformations required by goals. Physical behaviours are related to, and express, abstract behaviours.

Accordingly, the user is conceptualised as a system of both mental (abstract) and overt (physical) behaviours which extend a mutual influence – they are related. In particular, they are related within an assumed hierarchy of behaviour types (and their control) wherein mental behaviours generally determine, and are expressed by, overt behaviours. Mental behaviours may transform (abstract) domain objects represented in cognition, or express through overt behaviour plans for transforming domain objects.

1 The human behaviours and computer behaviours are separate systems ‘coupled’ to form a worksystem (see Ashby, 1956)

2Behaviours are conceptualised as being supported and enabled by co-extensive structures. The user, however, is a description of a behavioural system and does not describe the corresponding human structures (see later in Section 2.3.).

3This conception of human behaviour differs from that of behaviourist psychology which generally seeks correlations between observable inputs and outputs of a mental ‘blackbox’ without reference to any postulated artifacts of the mind or brain. Dowell and Long 17

So for example, the operator working in the control room of the foundry has the product goal required to maintain a desired condition of the computer-controlled steel rolling process. The operator attends to the computer (whose behaviours include the transmission of information about the process). Hence, the operator acquires a representation of the current condition of the process by collating the information displayed by the computer and assessing it by comparison with the condition specified by the product goal. The operator`s acquisition, collation and assessment are each distinct mental behaviours, conceptualised as representing and processing information. The operator reasons about the attribute state changes necessary to eliminate any discrepancy between current and desired conditions of the process, that is, the set of related changes which will produce the required transformation of the process. That decision is expressed in the set of instructions issued to the computer through overt behaviour – making keystrokes, for example.

The user is conceptualised as having cognitive, conative and affective aspects. The cognitive aspects of the user are those of their knowing, reasoning and remembering, etc; the conative aspects are those of their acting, trying and persevering, etc; and the affective aspects are those of their being patient, caring, and assured, etc. Both mental and overt human behaviours are conceptualised as having these three aspects.

Human-computer interaction

Although the human and computer behaviours may be treated as separable sub-systems of the worksystem, those sub-systems extend a “mutual influence”, or interaction whose configuration principally determines the worksystem (Ashby, 1956).

Interaction is conceptualised as:

the mutual influence of the user (i.e., the human behaviours) and the computer behaviours associated within an interactive worksystem

Hence, the user {U} and computer behaviours {C} constituting a worksystem {S}, were expressed in the general design problem of HF (Section 2.1) as:

{U} interacting with {C} = {S}

Interaction of the human and computer behaviours is the fundamental determinant of the worksystem, rather than their individual behaviours per se. For example, the behaviours of an operator interact with the behaviours of a computer-controlled milling machine. The operator’s behaviours influence the behaviours of the machine, perhaps in the tool path program – the behaviours of the machine, perhaps the run-out of its tool path, influences the selection behaviour of the operator. The configuration of their interaction – the inspection that the machine allows the operator, the tool path control that the operator allows the machine – determines the worksystem that the operator and machine behaviours constitute in their planning and execution of the machining work.

The assignment of task goals then, to either the human or the computer delimits the user and therein configures the interaction. For example, replacement of a mis-spelled word required in a document is a product goal which can be expressed as a task goal structure of necessary and related attribute state changes. In particular, the text field for the correctly spelled word demands an attribute state change in the text spacing of the document. Specifying that state change may be a task goal assigned to the user, as in interaction with the behaviours of early text editor designs, or it may be a task goal assigned to the computer, as in interaction with the ‘wrap-round’ behaviours of contemporary wordprocessor designs. The assignment of the task goal of specification configures the interaction of the human and computer behaviours in each case; it delimits the user.

On-line and off-line human behaviours Dowell and Long 18

The user may include both on-line and off-line human behaviours: on-line behaviours are associated with the computer’s representation of the domain; offline behaviours are associated with non-computer representations of the domain, or the domain itself.

As an illustration of the distinction, consider the example of an interactive worksystem consisting of behaviours of a secretary and a wordprocessor and required to produce a paper-based copy of a dictated letter stored on audio tape. The product goal of the worksystem here requires the transformation of the physical representation of the letter from one medium to another, that is, from tape to paper. From the product goal derives the task goals relating to required attribute state changes of the letter. Certain of those task goals will be assigned to the secretary. The secretary’s off-line behaviours include listening to, and assimilating the dictated letter, so acquiring a representation of the domain directly. By contrast, the secretary’s on-line behaviours include specifying the represention by the computer of the transposed content of the letter in a desired visual/verbal format of stored physical symbols.

On-line and off-line human behaviours are a particular case of the ‘internal’ interactions between a human’s behaviours as, for example, when the secretary’s typing interacts with memorisations of successive segments of the dictated letter.

Human structures and the user

Conceptualisation of the user as a system of human behaviours needs to be extended to the structures supporting behaviour.

Whereas human behaviours may be loosely understood as ‘what the human does’, the structures supporting them can be understood as ‘how they are able to do what they do’ (see Marr, 1982; Wilden, 1980). There is a one to many mapping between a human`s structures and the behaviours they might support: the structures may support many different behaviours.

In co-extensively enabling behaviours at each level, structures must exist at commensurate levels. The human structural architecture is both physical and mental, providing the capability for a human’s overt and mental behaviours. It provides a represention of domain information as symbols (physical and abstract) and concepts, and the processes available for the transformation of those representations. It provides an abstract structure for expressing information as mental behaviour. It provides a physical structure for expressing information as physical behaviour.

Physical human structure is neural, bio-mechanical and physiological. Mental structure consists of representational schemes and processes. Corresponding with the behaviours it supports and enables, human structure has cognitive, conative and affective aspects. The cognitive aspects of human structures include information and knowledge – that is, symbolic and conceptual representations – of the domain, of the computer and of the person themselves, and it includes the ability to reason. The conative aspects of human structures motivate the implementation of behaviour and its perseverence in pursuing task goals. The affective aspects of human structures include the personality and temperament which respond to and supports behaviour.

To illustrate the conceptualisation of mental structure, consider the example of structure supporting an operator’s behaviours in the foundry control room. Physical structure supports perception of the steel rolling process and executing corrective control actions to the process through the computer input devices. Mental structures support the acquisition, memorisation and transformation of information about the steel rolling process. The knowledge which the operator has of the process and of the computer supports the collation, assessment and reasoning about corrective control actions to be executed.

The limits of human structure determine the limits of the behaviours they might support. Such structural limits include those of: intellectual ability; knowledge of the domain and the computer; memory and attentional capacities; patience; perseverence; dexterity; and visual acuity etc. The structural limits on behaviour may become particularly apparent when one part of the structure (a Dowell and Long 19

channel capacity, perhaps) is required to support concurrent behaviours, perhaps simultaneous visual attending and reasoning behaviours. The user then, is ‘resource’ limited by the co-extensive human structure.

The behavioural limits of the human determined by structure are not only difficult to define with any kind of completeness, they will also be variable because that structure can change, and in a number of respects. A person may have self-determined changes in response to the domain – as expressed in learning phenomena, acquiring new knowledge of the domain, of the computer, and indeed of themselves, to better support behaviour. Also, human structure degrades with the expenditure of resources in behaviour, as evidenced in the phenomena of mental and physical fatigue. It may also change in response to motivating or de-motivating influences of the organisation which maintains the worksystem.

It must be emphasised that the structure supporting the user is independent of the structure supporting the computer behaviours. Neither structure can make any incursion into the other, and neither can directly support the behaviours of the other. (Indeed this separability of structures is a pre-condition for expressing the worksystem as two interacting behavioural sub-systems.) Although the structures may change in response to each other, they are not, unlike the behaviours they support, interactive; they are not included within the worksystem. The combination of structures of both human and computer supporting their interacting behaviours is conceptualised as the user interface .

Resource costs of the user

Work performed by interactive worksystems always incurs resource costs. Given the separability of the human and the computer behaviours, certain resource costs are associated directly with the user and distinguished as structural human costs and behavioural human costs.

Structural human costs are the costs of the human structures co-extensive with the user. Such costs are incurred in developing and maintaining human skills and knowledge. More specifically, structural human costs are incurred in training and educating people, so developing in them the structures which will enable their behaviours necessary for effective working. Training and educating may augment or modify existing structures, provide the person with entirely novel structures, or perhaps even reduce existing structures. Structural human costs will be incurred in each case and will frequently be borne by the organisation. An example of structural human costs might be the costs of training a secretary in the particular style of layout required for an organisation’s correspondence with its clients, and in the operation of the computer by which that layout style can be created.

Structural human costs may be differentiated as cognitive, conative and affective structural costs of the user. Cognitive structural costs express the costs of developing the knowledge and reasoning abilities of people and their ability for formulating and expressing novel plans in their overt behaviour – as necessary for effective working. Conative structural costs express the costs of developing the activity, stamina and persistence of people as necessary for effective working. Affective structural costs express the costs of developing in people their patience, care and assurance as necessary as necessary for effective working.

Behavioural human costs are the resource costs incurred by the user (i.e by human behaviours) in recruiting human structures to perform work. They are both physical and mental resource costs. Physical behavioural costs are the costs of physical behaviours, for example, the costs of making keystrokes on a keyboard and of attending to a screen display; they may be expressed without differentiation as physical workload. Mental behavioural costs are the costs of mental behaviours, for example, the costs of knowing, reasoning, and deciding; they may be expressed without differentiation as mental workload. Mental behavioural costs are ultimately manifest as physical behavioural costs.

When differentiated, mental and physical behavioural costs are conceptualised as the cognitive, conative and affective behavioural costs of the user. Cognitive behavioural costs relate to both the mental representing and processing of information, and the demands made on the individual`s extant Dowell and Long 20

knowledge, as well as the physical expression thereof in the formulation and expression of a novel plan. Conative behavioural costs relate to the repeated mental and physical actions and effort required by the formulation and expression of the novel plan. Affective behavioural costs relate to the emotional aspects of the mental and physical behaviours required in the formulation and expression of the novel plan. Behavioural human costs are evidenced in human fatigue, stress and frustration; they are costs borne directly by the individual. Dowell and Long 21

2.4. Conception of Performance of the Interactive Worksystem and the User.

In asserting the general design problem of HF (Section 2.1.), it was reasoned that:

“Effectiveness derives from the relationship of an interactive worksystemwith its domain of application – it assimilates both the quality of the work performed by the worksystem, and the costs incurred by it. Quality and cost are the primary constituents of the concept of performance through which effectiveness is expressed. ”

This statement followed from the distinction between interactive worksystems performing work, and the work they perform. Subsequent elaboration upon this distinction enables reconsideration of the concept of performance, and examination of its central importance within the conception for HF.

Because the factors which constitute this engineering concept of performance (i.e the quality and costs of work) are determined by behaviour, a concordance is assumed between the behaviours of worksystems and their performance: behaviour determines performance (see Ashby, 1956; Rouse, 1980). The quality of work performed by interactive worksystems is conceptualised as the actual transformation of objects with regard to their transformation demanded by product goals. The costs of work are conceptualised as the resource costs incurred by the worksystem, and are separately attributed to the human and computer. Specifically, the resource costs incurred by the human are differentiated as: structural human costs – the costs of establishing and maintaining the structure supporting behaviour; and behavioural human costs – the costs of the behaviour recruiting structure to its own support. Structural and behavioural human costs were further differentiated as cognitive, conative and affective costs.

A desired performance of an interactive worksystem may be conceptualised. Such a desired performance might either be absolute, or relative as in a comparative performance to be matched or improved upon. Accordingly, criteria expressing desired performance, may either specify categorical gross resource costs and quality, or they may specify critical instances of those factors to be matched or improved upon1.

Discriminating the user’s performance within the performance of the interactive worksystem would require the separate assimilation of human resource costs and their achievement of desired attribute state changes demanded by their assigned task goals. Further assertions concerning the user arise from the conceptualisation of worksystem performance. First, the conception of performance is able to distinguish the quality of the transform from the effectiveness of the worksystems which produce them. This distinction is essential as two worksystems might be capable of producing the same transform, yet if one were to incur a greater resource cost than the other, its effectiveness would be the lesser of the two systems.

Second, given the concordance of behaviour with performance, optimal human (and equally, computer) behaviours may be conceived as those which incur a minimum of resource costs in producing a given transform. Optimal human behaviour would minimise the resource costs incurred in producing a transform of given quality (Q). However, that optimality may only be categorically determined with regard to worksystem performance, and the best performance of a worksystem may still be at variance with the performance desired of it (PD). To be more specific, it is not sufficient for human behaviours simply to be error-free. Although the elimination of errorful human behaviours may contribute to the best performance possible of a given worksystem, that performance may still be

1See Section 1.4. where the possibility for expressing, by an absolute value, the desired performance of a system or artifact is associated with the hardness of the design problem. Dowell and Long 22

less than desired performance. Conversely, although human behaviours may be errorful, a worksystem may still support a desired performance.

Third, the common measures of human ‘performance’ – errors and time, are related in this conceptualisation of performance. Errors are behaviours which increase resource costs incurred in producing a given transform, or which reduce the quality of transform, or both. The duration of human behaviours may (very generally) be associated with increases in behavioural user costs.

Fourth, structural and behavioural human costs may be traded-off in performance. More sophisticated human structures supporting the user, that is, the knowledge and skills of experienced and trained people, will incur high (structural) costs to develop, but enable more efficient behaviours – and therein, reduced behavioural costs.

Fifth, resource costs incurred by the human and the computer may be traded-off in performance. A user can sustain a level of performance of the worksystem by optimising behaviours to compensate for the poor behaviours of the computer (and vice versa), i.e., behavioural costs of the user and computer are traded-off. This is of particular concern for HF as the ability of humans to adapt their behaviours to compensate for poor computer-based systems often obscures the low effectiveness of worksystems.

This completes the conception for HF. From the initial assertion of the general design problem of HF, the concepts that were invoked in its formal expression have subsequently been defined and elaborated, and their coherence established.

2.5. Conclusions and the Prospect for Human Factors Engineering Principles

Part I of this paper examined the possibility of HF becoming an engineering discipline and specifically, of formulating HF engineering principles. Engineering principles, by definition prescriptive, were seen to offer the opportunity for a significantly more effective discipline, ameliorating the problems which currently beset HF – problems of poor integration, low efficiency, efficacy without guarantee, and slow development.

A conception for HF is a pre-requisite for the formulation of HF engineering principles. It is the concepts and their relations which express the HF general design problem and which would be embodied in HF engineering principles. The form of a conception for HF was proposed in Part II. Originating in a conception for an engineering discipline of HCI (Dowell and Long, 1988a), the conception for HF is postulated as appropriate for supporting the formulation of HF engineering principles.

The conception for HF is a broad view of the HF general design problem. Instances of the general design problem may include the development of a worksystem, or the utilisation of a worksystem within an organisation. Developing worksystems which are effective, and maintaining the effectiveness of worksystems within a changing organisational environment, are both expressed within the problem. In addition, the conception takes the broad view on the research and development activities necessary to solve the general design problem and its instantiations, respectively. HF engineering research practices would seek solutions, in the form of (methodological and substantive) engineering principles, to the general design problem. HF engineering practices in systems development programmes would seek to apply those principles to solve instances of the general design problem, that is, to the design of specific users within specific interactive worksystems. Collaboration of HF and SE specialists and the integration of their practices is assumed.

Notwithstanding the comprehensive view of determinacy developed in Part I, the intention of specification associated with people might be unwelcome to some. Yet, although the requirement for Dowell and Long 23

design and specification of the user is being unequivocally proposed, techniques for implementing those specifications are likely to be more familiar than perhaps expected – and possibly more welcome. Such techniques might include selection tests, aptitude tests, training programmes, manuals and help facilities, or the design of the computer.

A selection test would assess the conformity of a candidates’ behaviours with a specification for the user. An aptitude test would assess the potential for a candidates’ behaviours to conform with a specification for the user. Selection and aptitude tests might assess candidates either directly or indirectly. A direct test would observe candidates’ behaviours in ‘hands on’ trial periods with the ‘real’ computer and domain, or with simulations of the computer and domain. An indirect test would examine the knowledge and skills (i.e., the structures) of candidates, and might be in the form of written examinations. A training programme would develop the knowledge and skills of a candidate as necessary for enabling their behaviours to conform with a specification for the user. Such programmes might take the form of either classroom tuition or ‘hands on’ learning. A manual or on-line help facility would augment the knowledge possessed by a human, enabling their behaviours to conform with a specification for the user. Finally, the design of the computer itself, through the interactions of its behaviours with the user, would enable the implementation of a specification for the user.

To conclude, discussion of the status of the conception for HF must be briefly extended. The contemporary HF discipline was characterised as a craft discipline. Although it may alternatively be claimed as an applied science discipline, such claims must still admit the predominantly craft nature of systems development practices (Long and Dowell, 1989). No instantiations of the HF engineering discipline implied in this paper are visible, and examples of supposed engineering practices may be readily associated with craft or applied science disciplines. There are those, however, who would claim the craft nature of the HF discipline to be dictated by the nature of the problem it addresses. They may maintain that the indeterminism and complexity of the problem of designing human systems (the softness of the problem) precludes the application of formal and prescriptive knowledge. This claim was rejected in Part I on the grounds that it mistakes the current absence of formal discipline knowledge as an essential reflection of the softness of its general design problem. The claim fails to appreciate that this absence may rather be symptomatic of the early stage of the discipline`s development. The alternative position taken by this paper is that the softness of the problem needs to be independently established. The general design problem of HF is, to some extent, hard – human behaviour is clearly to some useful degree deterministic – and certainly sufficiently deterministic for the design of certain interactive worksystems. It may accordingly be presumed that HF engineering principles can be formulated to support product quality within a systems development ethos of ‘design for performance’.

The extent to which HF engineering principles might be realiseable in practice remains to be seen. It is not supposed that the development of effective systems will never require craft skills in some form, and engineering principles are not seen to be incompatible with craft knowledge, particularly with respect to their instantiation (Long and Dowell, 1989). At a minimum, engineering principles might be expected to augment the craft knowledge of HF professionals. Yet the great potential of HF engineering principles for the effectiveness of the discipline demands serious consideration. However, their development would only be by intention, and would be certain to demand a significant research effort. This paper is intended to contribute towards establishing the conception required for the formulation of HF engineering principles. Dowell and Long 24

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Didner R.S. A Value Added Approach to Systems Design. Human Factors Society Bulletin, May 1988.

Dowell J., and Long J. B., (1988a), Human-Computer Interaction Engineering. In N. Heaton and M . Sinclair (ed.s), Designing End-User Interfaces. A State of the Art Report. 15:8. Oxford: Pergamon Infotech.

Dowell, J., and Long, J. B., 1988b, A Framework for the Specification of Collaborative Research in Human Computer Interaction, in UK IT 88 Conference Publication 1988, pub. IEE and BCS.

Gibson J.J., (1977), The Theory of Affordances. In R.E. Shaw and J. Branford (ed.s), Perceiving, Acting and Knowing. New Jersey: Erlbaum.

Gries D., (1981), The Science of Programming, New York: Springer Verlag.

Hubka V., Andreason M.M. and Eder W.E., (1988), Practical Studies in Systematic Design, London: Butterworths.

Long J.B., Hammond N., Barnard P. and Morton J., (1983), Introducing the Interactive Computer at Work: the Users’ Views. Behaviour And Information Technology, 2, pp. 39-106.

Long, J., (1987), Cognitive Ergonomics and Human Computer Interaction. In P. Warr (ed.), Psychology at Work. England: Penguin.

Long J.B., (1989), Cognitive Ergonomics and Human Computer Interaction: an Introduction. In J.B. Long and A.D. Whitefield (ed.s), Cognitive Ergonomics and Human Computer Interaction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Long J.B. and Dowell J., (1989), Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI: Craft, Applied Science, and Engineering. In Sutcliffe A. and Macaulay L., Proceedings of the Fifth Conference of the BCS HCI SG. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dowell and Long 25

Marr D., (1982), Vision. New York: Wh Freeman and Co.

Morgan D.G., Shorter D.N. and Tainsh M., (1988), Systems Engineering. Improved Design and Construction of Complex IT systems. Available from IED, Kingsgate House, 66-74 Victoria Street, London, SW1.

Norman D.A. and Draper S.W. (eds) (1986): User Centred System Design. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum;

Pirsig R., 1974, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. London: Bodley Head.

Rouse W. B., (1980), Systems Engineering Models of Human Machine Interaction. New York: Elsevier North Holland.

Shneiderman B. (1980): Software Psychology: Human Factors in Computer and Information Systems. Cambridge, Mass.: Winthrop.

Thimbleby H., (1984), Generative User Engineering Principles for User Interface Design. In B. Shackel (ed.), Proceedings of the First IFIP conference on Human-Computer Interaction. Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT’84. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science. Vol.2, pp. 102-107.

van Gisch J. P. and Pipino L.L., (1986), In Search of a Paradigm for the Discipline of Information Systems, Future Computing Systems, 1 (1), pp. 71-89.

Walsh P., Lim K.Y., Long J.B., and Carver M.K., (1988), Integrating Human Factors with System Development. In: N. Heaton and M. Sinclair (eds): Designing End-User Interfaces. Oxford: Pergamon Infotech.

Wilden A., 1980, System and Structure; Second Edition. London: Tavistock Publications.

This paper has greatly benefited from discussion with others and from their criticisms. We would like to thank our collegues at the Ergonomics Unit, University College London and in particular, Andy Whitefield, Andrew Life and Martin Colbert. We would also like to thank the editors of the special issue for their support and two anonymous referees for their helpful comments. Any remaining infelicities – of specification and implementation – are our own.

Planning for Multiple Task Work – an Analysis of a Medical Reception Worksystem 150 150 John

Planning for Multiple Task Work – an Analysis of a Medical Reception Worksystem

Becky Hill, John Long, Walter Smith and Andy Whitefield

Ergonomics and HCI Unit, University College London,
26 Bedford Way, London WCIH OAP

 

ABSTRACT

.

This paper presents an investigation of interactive worksystem planning in the multiple task work domain of medical reception. In an observational study of a medical reception worksystem, three different types of plan were identified: the task plan, the procedure plan and the activity plan, These three types of plan were required for effective working in the domain of medical reception, because of the many similar concurrent tasks, the frequency of behaviour switching between tasks and the need for consistency within the worksystem. It is proposed, therefore, that to design effective interactive human-computer worksystems for the domain of medical reception (and possibly for other work domains of a similar nature), the designer must specify the three different types of plan and the relationships between them. The three types of plan in medical reception are discussed in the context of design issues such as the allocation of planning structures.

KEYWORDS

medical reception; planning and control; multiple tasks.

1 INTRODUCTION

This paper presents an observational study of the plans and planning behaviour of a medical reception worksystem. The study was carried out to develop further an existing design-oriented framework of the planning and control of multiple task work (PCMT) (Smith, Hill, Long and Whitefield, 1993 [5]). Section 1 provides some background information about medical reception (MR), and identifies it as a ‘PCMT design problem’. Section 2 describes the particular medical reception worksystem studied and how the observational data were collected and analysed. Section 3 contains the resulting model of PCMT in medical reception, while Section 4 presents more detailed accounts of the three dtifercnt types of plan used by the medical reception worksystem. The model is intended to have appropriate content to aid in reasoning about design, but is not yet in a suitable form for use within an existing design methodology. Section 5 identifies design issues addressed by the model.

 

1.1 Medical Reception (in the UK)

Informally, we can identify medical reception worksystems as those interactive systems, comprising combinations of people and office devices, which support the effective interaction between medical practitioners and their patients in medical general practices.

Jeffreys and Sachs (1983) [1] have described the emergence of medcal reception worksystems in the UK. In 1966, there was a boost to the employment of receptionists and secretaries, because the Family Doctors Charter was implemented, which gave provision for GPs to reclaim 70% of the salaries paid to their staff, Closely related to the increasing employment of receptionists was the growth in the use of appointment systems in general practice, as an appointment system could not be implemented without the employment of receptionist staff. General practices have begun in the last few years to be computerised, however the number has been small. The British government has more recently introduced a scheme of partial reimbursement of computer costs to increase computerisation.

Medical reception, therefore, presents an example of what might be described as an emerging Human Computer Interaction (HCI) design problem. Following the approach of Dowell and Long (1989) [2], the medical reception HCI design problem might be stated as: to specify the structures and behaviors of a human-computer interactive medical reception worksystem which will carry out work in the domain of medicalreception to a desired level of performance.

1.2 Medical Reception as an Instance of the Planning and Control of Multiple Task Work

There are many different issues to be addressed in the design of medical reception worksystems. The ‘set of issues addressed in this paper are those concerning PCMT. The general aim of the present research is to construct an appropriate model to aid designers reasoning about alternative solutions to this medical reception- PCMT design problem. The aim of the observational study reported here was to investigate the types of planning and plans used by medical reception worksystems to carry out work effectively.

The computerisation of worksystems typically increases the speed with which simple routine activities can be accomplished, e.g. searching for data, compiling revised/updated tables of information and their communication. The changing nature of routine activities has consequences for the management and supervision of work. Some of the most challenging human factors design issues for computerised systems, therefore, concern these higher-level behaviors which are here referred to as planning and control. The design of planning and control behaviors is particularly important where the worksystem carries out several ongoing tasks concurrently.

1.3 A Design-Oriented Framework of PCMT-MR

The notions of multiple task work and planning and control used in this paper are based on a previously constructed PCMT framework (Smith, Hill, Long and Whitefield, 1992a [3]; 1993 [5]). This section briefly outlines a PCMT-MR framework, the application of the PCMT framework to medical reception, in sufficient detail to understand the resulting model presented in Section 3.

The ‘PCMT-MR framework is based on Dowell and Long’s (1989) conception for an engineering discipline of HCI which expresses the HCI general design problem. The conception makes a fundamental distinction between an interactive worksystem, comprising one or more users and computers, and its domain of application, comprising the transformations carried out by the worksystem which constitute its work. The effectiveness with which work is carried out is expressed by the concept of performance which can be defined as a function of two factors: the quality of the product (i.e. how well the desired state of the domain is achieved compared with the state specified in the goal); and the incurred resource costs (i.e. the resources required by the worksystem in accomplishing the work).

The interactive worksystem, its domain of application and performance.

In medical reception, the worksystem is the receptionist plus devices such as an appointment book, telephone and prescription filing system, a wider notion of worksystem used in order to analyse to-be-computerised systems. The medical reception domain is conceptualised as the provision of support for medical cases, i.e. patients consulting with medical practitioners. Medical reception performance concerns the effectiveness with which support is provided for the medical cases.

Multiple task work.

The medical reception domain is an instance of multiple task work since support is given concurrently for multiple ongoing and temporally overlapping medical cases. A single medical reception task is the transformation of a single medical case object comprising a patient object, medical practitioner object(s), diagnosis object(s) and treatment object(s). This task might require a diverse range of behaviors spread over a long period of time, for example arranging a suitable appointment for patient P, notifying patient P of test results.

Planning and cotttrol behaviour.

It has been argued elsewhere (Smith et al, 1992b, [4]) that for an adequate

characterisation of the planning and control structures of worksystems which carry out work in complex and dynamic domains, it is necessary to make explicit the relationship between planning, control, perception and execution behaviors. Planning, in medical reception, entails specifying how medical case objects are to be supported by specifying either required transformations of medical case objects andlor required behaviors. Control entails deciding which behaviour to carry out next, such as arranging an appointment for patient P1 or preparing notes for P2. Perception and execution behaviors are, respectively, those whereby the medical reception worksystem acquires information about the medical case objects and those whereby it provides the required support.

Cognitive structures and allocation of function.

The PCMT-MR framework expresses the worksystem at two levels of description. Firstly, the framework describes the cognitive structures of the worksystem, expressed as four processes – perceiving, planning, controlling and executing – and two representations – knowledge-of-thetasks

and plans. This relationship is illustrated in more detail in the description of the PCMT-MR model (Section 3). Secondly, the framework describes the distribution of these cognitive structures across the physically separate user and devices of particular worksystems. The framework therefore allows the construction of alternative models of the distribution of cognitive structures across the user and devices, and thus, it supports reasoning about allocation of function.

2 AN OBSERVATIONAL STUDY OF MEDICAL RECEPTION

This Section describes an observational study of a medical reception worksystem. The aim of the observational study was to investigate the types of planning and plans used by medical reception worksystems to carry outwork effectively.

2.1 The Medical Reception Worksystem

The medical reception worksystem chosen for the study supported the provision of medical care in a general practice with four doctors and two nurses. This worksystem was physically divided into two different workstations, with two receptionists working from a ‘front desk’ and a ‘back desk’. The front desk workstation comprised a receptionist and devices, such as a telephone, and an appointments book. The back desk workstation comprised a second receptionist and devices, such as a prescription book, telephone and a computerised database. The front desk was positioned in front of a hatch through which the receptionist interacted with patients arriving at the surgery Under guidance of the receptionist patients passed from the hatch to a waiting room before seeing a medical practitioner.

2.2 The Nature of the Medical Reception Domain

As described in Section 1.3, the medical reception domain involves multiple task work. These tasks are characterised by:

(i) welldefined, routine sub-tasks;

(ii) variable durations, of between one day and several weeks

(iii) a high frequency of autonomous events; that is, task-relevant events which occur independently of any worksystem behaviour, for example: the arrival of a patient at the hatch or an incoming telephone-call.

 

Figure 1 The Model of PCMT-MR

worksystem structures:                                              domain of application:

representations and processes                                 multiple task work

 

2.3 Data Collection

Video-recordings were taken of the two workstations. Two video cameras were used simultaneously, one camera focused on the appointment-booking system of the front desk, while the other camera recorded the interactions within the whole reception area including both desks. Video-recordings were taken, both during and outside surgery hours, for one morning and afternoon in which time one pair of receptionists was relieved by another. At a later date, after initial analysis, an interview was carried out with one receptionist, to obtain clarification of selected details concerning the work. Only the analysis of video-recordings is reported here, although this analysis was assisted by the interview.

2.4 Data Analysis

Only the two videos recorded in the morning were analysed, because sufficient data were gathered from these two videos. The following analysis was carried out on both videos. From the 240 minutes of video-recording a sequence of between 30-90 minutes was selected for analysis. This selection was based mainly on the criteria that (i) the observed behaviors were interpretable, and (ii) the analysed period appeared to be busy in support of medical cases (and so was presumed to include behaviors of interest).

The first stage of the analysis was the documentation of behaviors and task-related events to a level of description considered to be at, or below, that necessary for the identitlcation of planning and control behaviors. This first description allowed the identification ofi (i) a low-level description of the physical domain objects (e.g., prescription) ; (ii) a low-level description of the physical worksystem devices (e.g. ‘phone 1; prescription box). Behaviours and events were documented in chronological sequence in a manner illustrated, as follows:

telephone 1                BUZZ

receptionist 1             PICK UP pencil

receptionist 1             PICK UP receiver ‘phone 1

receptionist 1              SELECT-LINE ‘phone 1

receptionist 1

(over telephone):                     Hello can I help?

event:         P PUT prescription in prescription box

receptionist 1

(over telephone)                        Dr S?

 

From this first analysis, it was possible to identify sequences of behaviors which were generic to particular activities carried out by the receptionist worksystem, for example appointment-booking.

3 A MODEL OF PCMT-MR

Section 1.3 described the conceptual framework of PCMT-MR constructed prior to carrying out the observational study outlined in Section 2. Sections 3 and 4 now describe the model of PCMT-MR constructed by using the observations of medical reception tasks and behaviors to instantiate the concepts of the framework.

The modelling of the observations of medical reception can be divided into two parts. Frost, a description of the medical reception worksystem and domain was generated, which is presented in this section. Second, a detailed description of the observed plans was constructed, presented in Section 4. Figure 1 provides a selective overview of the model of PCMT-MR which is now described.

 

al case

3.1 The Medical Reception Worksystem

The expression of the medical reception worksystem in Figure 1 shows cognitive structures taken from the PCMT-MR framework (described in Section 1.3). These cognitive structures are expressed at a generic level; that is, they depict the cognition of the medical reception works ystem prior to any allocation of function between the receptionist and devices. The relationships between the cognitive structures in Figure 1 embody the definitions of the planning and control behaviors described in Section 1.3. (For more detail see Smith et al, 1992b [4]). The plan representation structure in Figure 1 has been ‘opened-up’ to show the dtiferent types of plan identified in the study which are described in detail in Section 4.

3.2 The Medical Reception Domain

Following tbe PCMT-MR framework, the medical reception domain is expressed as those objects whose transformation constitutes the work of medical reception. Thus, the domain contains multiple medical case objects, each medical case object comprising a patient object, medical practitioner object(s), diagnosis object(s) and treatment object(s). Each task constitutes the transformation of a single medical case object with respect to the values of a number of attributes. In order to transform the medical case object attributes, the attributes of the medkxd case sub-objects (which are in a part-whole relationship with the medical case object), must be transformed. Tables 1-3 describe the transformation of the objects associated with the sub-task of appointment-booking. One of the attributes of a medical case object which must be transformed is appointment suitability for the patient. To transform the value of this attribute, the values of some of the attributes of the patient sub-object must be transformed.

The study revealed that the required transformation of each medical case object could be divided into a number of sub-transformations concerning particular sets of attributes. The division of the tasks into sub-transformations was consistent across all the tasks, and therefore the sub-transformations could be labelled generic sub-tasks. The generic sub-tasks identified in this study of medical reception were: appointment-booking, preparation of repeat prescriptions, registration of new patients, preparation (and updating) of medical notes for medical practitioners, and notification of patients test results.

Associated with the set of identified generic sub-tasks there were a corresponding set of activities. An activity is that set of behaviors which carry out a generic subtask.

The activities identified in medical reception were: booking of appointments, preparing repeat prescriptions, registering new patients, preparing (and updating) medical notes for medical practitioners, and notifying patients of test results. Due to limitation of space, only appointment-booking will be described in detail.

Figure 1 shows only those attributes which apply to the generic sub-task of appointment-booking. Attributes may be affordant or dispositional. Affordant attributes are transformed by tie worksystem; their transformation constitutes the work done. Dispositional attributes are relevant to the work but their transformation does not itself constitute work (often d@ositional attributes do not change their values). The attributes marked with an asterisk (*) in Figure 1 and Tables 1-3 are dispositional, for appointment-booking.

4 PLANS AND PLANNING IN THE MEDICAL

RECEPTION WORKSYSTEM

Following the PCMT-MR framework, plans are representations of how tasks are to be accomplished, specified to some level of completeness, some level of detail and in some format. In the study of medical reception, it was possible to identify three different plans employed by the worksystem. This section describes these three plans in turn and shows how they were interpreted as instances of three general types of plan: a task plan, an activity plan and a procedure plan.

4.1 The Task Plan

The receptionists used two appointment books (one for doctors and one for nurses) to represent and record details of patient appointments with the medical practitioners. Figure 2 schematically depicts the information represented in the appointment book for doctors: names of patients occupying particular appointment slots; whether or not the patient had entered the waiting room; slots which were still available; slots which the medical practitioners wanted to be left open; slots which could be used in emergencies. The receptionists also used what can be called ‘mental markers’; that is, they made mental notes of temporarily significant appoinixnent slots, such as the next available appointment of a particular medical practitioner or a slot which was in the process of being offered to a patient but not yet accepted.

~

From other perspectives, the appointment books might be regarded as plans for the whole practice. In the present analysis, the appointment books plus the associated mental markers were regarded as plans of the medical reception worksystem because they guided its behaviour, for example, they represented the patients whose medical notes needed to be prepared for the doctor, and the patients who should be let into the waiting-room. In terms of the PCMT-MR framework, the appointment books were plans which represented information about domain object attribute values. Specifically, they represented information about the patient object attributes of appointment-time and appointment-practitioner, and medical practitioner object attributes of availability (see Figure 1).

The information represented in the appointment books was specific to particulru objects, i.e. patients and medical practitioners, in the medical reception domain and was therefore specific to particular tasks, i.e. transformations of medical cases. The appointment books, with associated mental markers, were therefore identified as instances of a generic type of plan – the task plan. In general, task plans are specifications of either behaviors or domain object transformations relating to specific task instances. The appointment books were therefore paftial task plans.

4.2 The Activity Plan

As described in Section 3.2, the medical reception worksystem carried out a number of different activities, e.g. appointment-booking, preparing medical notes. From the video-recording and interview, it was possible to identify that the receptionists had a shared daily schedule of activities, mentally represented, to be carried out by the front and back desk receptionists. Figure 3 shows the activity schedule of the observed medical reception worksystem on the day of recording. This schedule was not rigidly adhered to as many activities, such as notifying of test results, were carried out in direct response to autonomous events such as patients telephoning the surgery.

 

The information represented in the activity schedule was specific to the carrying out of particular activities, as opposed to particular tasks. The activity schedule was therefore identified as an instance of a generic type of plan – the activity plan. In general, activity plans are specifications of sequences of activities to be carried out where each activity is a set of behaviors relating to a particular generic sub-task of the domain (see Section 3.2).

4.3 The Procedure Plan

Through analysis of the video-recordings, supported by interviews, it was possible to identify that the receptionist went through well-established sequences of behaviors when carrying out a particular activity. Thus the receptionists had mental routines, with in-built conditionals, for carrying out each activity, such as preparing medical notes, booking of appointments, preparing repeat prescriptions, etc. These mentrd routines, which represented information about behaviors and their contingencies for particular activities, were identified as instances of a generic type of plan – the procedure plan. In general, a procedure plan specifies an effective sequence of behaviors, and their contingencies, for carrying out a particular activity which relates to a generic sub-task of the domain (see Section 3.2).

As an illustration, the procedure plan for booking of appointments is now deseribed in detail. Figure 4 shows a flow diagram of behaviors, with associated conditionals, carried out in the activity of booking of appointments. The conditionals imply other behaviors; for example, the fmt conditional in Figure 4 implies that the controlling process must initiate the behaviour of reading the contents of Knowledge of tasks and, if  necessary, to perceive the patient’s requirement for appointment time (see Figure 1). Thus this procedure plan for booking of appointments describes the

 

behaviors of the worksystem in terms of both the

planning, control, perception and execution behaviors

and the transformation of the medical case objects that

constitute the generic sub-task of appointment-booking

(see Section 4.4).

4.4 The Relationship between the Different Plans

The following scenario of an appointment being booked

illustrates the relationship between the three plans shown

in Figure 1, and shows how they operated in combination

to guide the worksystem’s behaviour.

At the beginning of the day, the controlling process reads the activity plan – which specifies that receptionist R should carry out booking of appoinlxnents from the frontdesk during the morning (Figure 3) – and sets the parameters of the perceiving, executing and planning processes appropriately.

Later, an autonomous event occurs associated with thedomain: patient P telephones the surgery requiring an appointment. The controlling process then reads from the procedure plan for booking of appointments (Figure 4) which guides control decisions to activate the following sequence of behaviors:

– Perception:  perceiving the values of patient P’s attributes and updating knowledge-of-tasks: with the following attribute values:

appointment-requirements-who: own Dr (Dr X)

appointment-requirements-when: today

problem type: not emergency

– Planning: selecting and (mentally) marking a possible appointment slot in the task plan (i.e. the appointment book): Dr X, time t

– Execution: offering the selected appointment to patient P, i.e., attempt to transform Ps attribute values to: appointment-practitioner Dr X; appointment-time: time t

Perception: updating knowledge-of-tasks to register the acceptance of the appointment and patient Ps name.

– Planning: adding a representation of the agreed appointment to the task plan

– Perception: confirming the appointment details with patient P.

5 THE ROLE OF THE MODEL IN SUPPORTING THE DESIGN OF MEDICAL RECEPTION WORKSYSTEMS

The study of medical reception showed how the worksystem used three types of plan to carry out its work effectively. The relationship between the use of these different plan types and performance, i.e. the effectiveness with which the multiple task work was carried out will now be described along with their implications for the design of interactive worksystems.

– The Task Plan:  observed in the form of patient appointment books, supported the effective carrying out of the many ongoing tasks by:

1) giving guidance for the carrying out of behaviors relating to specific tasks, e.g. whether to admit patient PI to the waiting room, preparing medical notes for P2;

2) co-ordinating different tasks e.g. ensuring that appointments were unique for each task.

l The Activitv Plan: observed in the form of a (mentally represented) daily schedule of activities, supported the effective carrying out of tasks by:

1) supporting large-scale sharing of effort across separate tasks; e.g., when carrying out the activity of preparing repeat prescriptions, all of the medical notes for the patients requiring repeat prescriptions would be collected together at one time, thus reducing the behavioral costs to the worksystem;

2) co-ordinating the activities with the task-relevant changes in the domain; e.g., the activity of preparing repeat prescriptions was carried out during surgery hours, so that the prescriptions were ready for the doctors to verify and sign when the surgeries finished.

– Procedure Plan:  observed in the form of mental routines, supported the effective carrying out of repetitive sub-tasks which were generic across tasks (such as booking of appointments) by:

1) providing quick responses in a domain where there was a very high frequency of autonomous events (patients arriving, incoming telephone calls);

2) maintaining consistency which supported the rotation of the four receptionists around the two medical reception workstations;

3) supporting shared user behaviour, such that if one workstation was left unattended because a receptionist was busy the other receptionist on that shift could take over at the unattended workstation.

In computerizing, and therefore redesigning, the medical reception worksystem described in this paper, a designer should specify how the identified plans will be supported in the new design. For example it may be advisable to reallocate some of the mental plans to computerised devices, by:

i) having a partial procedure plan for booking of appointments device-based

ii) incorporating the currently used mental markers into a device-based appointment book. These two examples would enhance the effectiveness of the worksystem by aiding in the training of new receptionists and reducing their mental workload.

Therefore, in general, designs for medical reception

should Specify

(i) instances of all 3 plan types

(ii) the relationship between the different plans

(iii) the allocation of the plans across the receptionist and

the physically separate devices of the worksystem.

The generality of the plan types identified in the study reported here is uncertain at present. However, it might be suggested that the same issues will arise in the design of worksystems which carry out work in multiple task domains which are similar in nature to that of medical reception.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

The work reported herein was supported by the Joint Councils Initiative in Cognitive Science/IICI, grant no: SPG 8825634.

REFERENCES

[1] Jefferys, M. and Sachs, H. Rethinking General Practice: Dilemmas in Primary Health Care. London Tavistock 1983.

[2] Dowell J. and Long, J. Towards a conception for an engineering discipline of human factors. Ergonomics,32, (1989), 1513-1536.

[3] Smith, M.W., Hill, B., Long, J.B. and Whitefield, A.D. The Planning and Control of Multiple Task Work a Study of Secretarial Office Administration. In Proceedings of the Second Interdisciplinary Workshop on Mental Models, Cambridge, (1992a), 74- 83, in press.

[4] Smith, M.W., Hill, B., Long, J.B. and Whitefield, A.D. Modelling the Relationship Between Planning, Control, Perception and Execution Behaviors in Interactive Worksystems. In D.Diaper, M.Harrison and A.Monk (Eds) People and Computers VII; Proceedings of HCI ’92. Cambridge University Press, 1992b.

[51Smith, M.W., Hill, B., Long, J.B. and Whitefield, A.D. A Design-Oriented Framework of the Planning and Control of Multiple Task Work. Submitted for publication, 1993.

 

 

1.2 General Conception of HCI Engineering Discipline 150 150 John

1.2 General Conception of HCI Engineering Discipline

The General Conception of the HCI Engineering Discipline is generalised from the HCI/E Conception . The General Conception comprises HCI Engineering Knowledge, which distinguishes the interactive system of user and computer, the tasks it performs as desired and the goodness of that performance in terms of specific criteria.  The knowledge supports Practices, seeking to solve design problems.  Design here includes specification, followed by implementation and evaluation of users interacting with computers (the interactive system), to perform tasks as desired in some domain of application.

Key Concepts, Footnotes and Citations

The General Conception of the HCI Engineering Discipline is generalised from the HCI/E Conception (1.3). The General Conception comprises HCI Engineering Knowledge, which distinguishes the interactive system of user and computer, the tasks (F1) it performs as desired and the goodness of that performance in terms of specific criteria. (F2) (C1)  The knowledge supports HCI Engineering Practices, seeking to solve design problems. (C2) Design here includes specification, followed by implementation, of users interacting with computers ( the interactive system), to perform tasks as desired in some domain of application. (C3)

Key concepts are shown in bold on their first appearance only.

Footnotes

(F1) Task here is to be interpreted widely, as anything a user can do with a computer, either desired or undesired, well or badly.

(F2 ) Criteria, here, may include: time; errors; completeness etc.

Citations

Long and Dowell (1989)

(C1) ‘It (the Conception) dichotomises ‘interactive worksystems’ which perform work, and ‘domains of application’ in which work originates, is performed, and has its consequences’. (Page 24, Lines 39 and 40)

(C2) ‘The discipline of engineering includes the engineering practice addressing the general (engineering) problem of design.’  (Page 12, Lines 3-5)

(C3) ‘The discipline of engineering may characteristically solve its general problem (of design) by the specification of designs before their implementation.’ (Page 24, Lines 11-12).

 

3. HCI Engineering design Knowledge 150 150 John

3. HCI Engineering design Knowledge

The HCI/E(U) approach is grounded in a Conception of the HCI Engineering Discipline (Long and Dowell (1989) – see Section 1) and of the HCI Engineering Design Problem (Dowell and Long (1989) – see Section 2) – both products of the research. Unlike these two conceptions, however, the HCI/E(U) Conception of Engineering Design Knowledge has no single paper dedicated to its exposure. Rather, it appears throughout the Discipline and Design Problem conception papers. For this reason, 3.5 presents both papers in full and other sections include citations from both papers, where appropriate. Together the two papers present the complete HCI/E(U) Conception of Engineering Design Knowledge.

To make the HCI/E(U) Conception of Engineering Design Knowledge more accessible to a wide range of researchers: a complete expression appears in short versions of the Discipline and Design Problem papers (3.4); a summary version in 3.3; a generalized Engineering version in 3.2; and finally, a generalised HCI version in 3.1. The latter also serves as an introduction to the Conception. Finally, the concepts carried forward by the Conception appear in 3.6 and the EU research illustrations of HCI Engineering in 3.7.

As appropriate, a version is supported by citations (C) from the original Long and Dowell and Dowell and Long papers, which allows readers to check the derivation of the version from the original. (F) indicates footnotes.

3.1 General Conception of HCI Design Knowledge

The General Conception of HCI Design Knowledge is generalised from the General Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge (3.2).

General Conception of HCI Design Knowledge

3.2 General Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge

The General Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge is generalised from the HCI/E(U) Conception of HCI Design Knowledge (3.3)

General Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge

3.3 HCI/E(U) Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge: a Summary

The HCI/E(U) Conception of HCI Engineering Design is a summary of the the complete version – see 3.4 and 3.5.

HCI/E(U) Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge

3.4 Short versions of Long and Dowell (1989) and Dowell and Long (1989)

These two papers together expose the Conception of HCI/E(U) Design Knowledge. Short versions of the papers, relevant only to the topic of HCI Design Knowledge, are presented here. Full papers can be found in:

Long and Dowell (1989) – HCI Engineering Knowledge – Short Version

Dowell and Long (1989) – HCI Engineering Knowledge – Short Version

3.5 Full Versions of Long and Dowell (1989) and Dowell and Long (1989)

Here, the two papers are presented in their entirety, including a complete version of the HCI/E(U) Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge.

Long and Dowell (1989)
Dowell and Long (1989)
3.6 Concepts Carried Forward

The concepts carried forward in this section are: Design; Knowledge; and Design KnowledgeDesign; Knowledge; and Design Knowledge

3.7 Illustrations of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge from EU Research

3.7.1 Cummaford (2000) Validating Effective Design Knowledge for Re-Use: HCI Engineering Design Principles

Cummaford here applies the HCI/E(U) Conception of Design Knowledge to develop a conception of (HCI) Engineering Design Principles, as a framework within which systematically to relate design knowledge to performance.Design knowledge is illustrated throughout the paper.Cummaford (2000) Validating Effective Design Knowledge for Re-Use: HCI Engineering Design Principles

3.7.2 Hill, Long, Smith and Whitefield (1993) Planning for Multiple Task Work – an Analysis of a Medical Reception Worksystem

Hill et al. here apply the HCI/E(U) Conception of Design Knowledge to model different types of plan observed in the work of medical reception – see especially Section 4 Plans and Planning in the Medical Reception Worksystem.Hill,Long, Smith and Whitefield (1995) Planning for Multiple Task Work – an Analysis of a Medical Reception Worksystem

3.7.3 Hill and Long (1996) A Preliminary Model of the Planning and Control of the Combined Response to Disaster

Hill and Long apply the HCI/E(U) Conception of Design Knowledge to develop a model of the combined response to disaster – see especially PCMT EMCR ModelHill and Long (1996) A Preliminary Model of the Planning and Control of the Combined Response to Disaster

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1.4 Long and Dowell (1989) – HCI Engineering Discipline – Short Version 150 150 John

1.4 Long and Dowell (1989) – HCI Engineering Discipline – Short Version

Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI: Craft; Applied Science, and Engineering

John Long and John Dowell Ergonomics Unit, University College London, 26 Bedford Way, London. WC1H 0AP.

Pre-print: In: Sutcliffe, A. andMacaulay, L., (eds.) People and Computers V: Proceedings of the Fifth Conference of the British Computer Society.(pp. pp. 9-32). Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK.  http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/15292/  .

….. First, consideration of disciplines in general suggests their complete definition can be summarised as: ‘knowledge, practices and a general problem having a particular scope, where knowledge supports practices seeking solutions to the general problem’. Second, the scope of the general problem of HCI is defined by reference to humans, computers, and the work they perform. Third, by intersecting these two definitions, a framework is proposed ……

The framework expresses the essential characteristics of the HCI discipline, and can be summarised as: ‘the use of HCI knowledge to support practices seeking solutions to the general problem of HCI’……

Contents 1. Introduction 1.1. Alternative Interpretations of the Theme 1.2. Alternative Conceptions of HCI: the Requirement for a Framework 1.3. Aims 2. A Framework for Conceptions of the HCI Discipline 2.1. On the Nature of Disciplines 2.2. Of Humans Interacting with Computers 2.3. The Framework for Conceptions of the HCI Discipline 3. Three Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI 3.1. Conception of HCI as a Craft Discipline 3.2. Conception of HCI as an Applied Science Discipline 3.3. Conception of HCI as an Engineering Discipline 4. Summary and Conclusions

1. Introduction 

1.1. Alternative Interpretations of the Theme……..

1.2. Alternative Conceptions of HCI: the Requirement for a Framework …….. A conception of the HCI discipline offers a unitary view; its value lies in the coherence and completeness with which it enables understanding of the discipline, how the discipline operates, and its effectiveness……..  A suitable structure for this purpose would be a framework identifying the essential characteristics of the HCI discipline……..

1.3. Aims …..  the aims of this paper are as follows: (i) to propose a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline

2. A Framework for Conceptions of the HCI Discipline

Two prerequisites of a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline are assumed. The first is a definition of disciplines appropriate for the expression of HCI. The second is a definition of the province of concern of the HCI discipline, which, whilst broad enough to include all disparate aspects, enables the discipline’s boundaries to be identified. Each of these prerequisites will be addressed in turn (Sections 2.1. and 2.2.). From them is derived a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline (Section 2.3.). Source material for the framework is to be found in (Dowell & Long [1988]; Dowell & Long [manuscript submitted for publication]; and Long [1989]).

2.1. On the Nature of Disciplines

Most definitions assume three primary characteristics of disciplines: knowledge; practice; and a general problem. All definitions of disciplines make reference to discipline knowledge as the product of research or more generally of a field of study…….. All disciplines would appear to have knowledge as a component (for example, scientific discipline knowledge, engineering discipline knowledge, medical discipline knowledge, etc). Knowledge, therefore, is a necessary characteristic of a discipline. Consideration of different disciplines suggests that practice is also a necessary characteristic of a discipline. Further, a discipline’s knowledge is used by its practices to solve a general (discipline) problem. …….. The discipline of engineering includes the engineering practice addressing the general (engineering) problem of design. …….. Practice, therefore, and the general (discipline) problem which it uses knowledge to solve, are also necessary characteristics of a discipline. Clearly, disciplines are here being distinguished by the general (discipline) problem they address. …….. Yet consideration also suggests those general (discipline) problems each have the necessary property of a scope. Decomposition of a general (discipline) problem with regard to its scope exposes (subsumed) general problems of particular scopes……. 

Two basic properties of disciplines are therefore concluded. One is the property of the scope of a general discipline problem. The other is the possibility of division of a discipline into sub-disciplines by decomposition of its general discipline problem. Taken together, the three necessary characteristics of a discipline (and the two basic properties additionally concluded), suggest the definition of a discipline as: ‘the use of knowledge to support practices seeking solutions to a general problem having a particular scope’. It is represented schematically in Figure 1. This definition will be used subsequently to express HCI.

2.2. Of Humans Interacting with Computers

The second prerequisite of a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline is a definition of the scope of the general problem addressed by the discipline. In delimiting the province of concern of the HCI discipline, such a definition might assure the completeness of any one conception (see Section 1.2.). HCI concerns humans and computers interacting to perform work. ……. Further, since both organisations and individuals have requirements for the effectiveness with which work is performed, also implicated is the optimisation of all aspects of the interactions supporting effectiveness. Taken together, these implications suggest a definition of the scope of the general (discipline) problem of HCI. It is expressed, in summary, as ‘humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively’; it is represented schematically in Figure 2. This definition, in conjunction with the general definition of disciplines, will now enable expression of a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline.  2.3. The Framework for Conceptions of the HCI Discipline ….. Given the definition of its scope (above), and the preceding definition of disciplines, the general problem addressed by the discipline of HCI is asserted as: ‘the design of humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively’. It is a general (discipline) problem of design : its ultimate product is designs. The practices of the HCI discipline seek solutions to this general problem, for example: in the construction of computer hardware and software; in the selection and training of humans to use computers; in aspects of the management of work, etc. HCI discipline knowledge supports the practices that provide such solutions. ….. Hence, we may express a framework for conceptions of the discipline of HCI as: ‘the use of HCI knowledge to support practices seeking solutions to the general problem of HCI of designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively…… Importantly, the framework supposes the nature of effectiveness of the HCI discipline itself. There are two apparent components of this effectiveness. The first is the success with which its practices solve the general problem of designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. It may be understood to be synonymous with ‘product quality’. The second component of effectiveness of the discipline is the resource costs incurred in solving the general problem to a given degree of success – costs incurred by both the acquisition and application of knowledge. It may be understood to be synonymous with ‘production costs’. Figure 3. Framework for Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI ……

3. Three Conceptions of the Discipline of HCI A review of the literature was undertaken to identify alternative conceptions of HCI, that is, conceptions of the use of knowledge to support practices solving the general problem of the design of humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. The review identified three such conceptions. They are HCI as a craft discipline; as an applied scientific discipline; and as an engineering discipline……..

3.1. Conception of HCI as a Craft Discipline …….. Figure 4 Conception of HCI as a Craft Discipline ……..

3.2. Conception of HCI as an Applied Science Discipline …….. Figure 5 Conception of HCI as an Applied Science Discipline ……..

3.3. Conception of HCI as an Engineering Discipline The discipline of engineering may characteristically solve its general problem (of design) by the specification of designs before their implementation. It is able to do so because of the prescriptive nature of its discipline knowledge supporting those practices – knowledge formulated as engineering principles. Further, its practices are characterised by their aim of ‘design for performance’. Engineering principles may enable designs to be prescriptively specified for artefacts, or systems which when implemented, demonstrate a prescribed and assured performance. And further, engineering disciplines may solve their general problem by exploiting a decompositional approach to design. Designs specified at a general level of description may be systematically decomposed until their specification is possible at a level of description of their complete implementation. Engineering principles may assure each level of specification as a representation of the previous level. This Section summarises the conception (schematically represented in Figure 6) and attempts to indicate the effectiveness of such a discipline. The conception of HCI engineering principles assumes the possibility of a codified, general and testable formulation of HCI discipline knowledge which might be prescriptively applied to designing humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. …….. 

……..The concepts described enable the expression of the general problem addressed by an engineering discipline of HCI as: specify then implement user behaviour {U} and computer behaviour {C}, such that {U} interacting with {C} An HF engineering principle would take as input a performance requirement of the interactive worksystem, and a specified behaviour of the computer, and prescribe the necessary interacting behaviour of the user.

4. Summary and Conclusions

…….. The proposal made here is that the general problem of HCI is the design of humans and computers interacting to perform work effectively. The qualification of the general problem as ‘design’, and the addition to the scope of that problem of ‘…. to perform work effectively’, has important consequences for the different conceptions of HCI….. ….. The different types of knowledge and the different types of practice have important consequences for the effectiveness of any discipline of HCI……

References

For References – see the full version of the paper 1.5.

 

1.3 HCI/E Conception of HCI Engineering Discipline: a Summary 150 150 John

1.3 HCI/E Conception of HCI Engineering Discipline: a Summary

The HCI/E Conception of HCI as an Engineering discipline is a summary of the complete version (1.4 and 1.5).

The Conception comprises: HCI Engineering Knowledge as Principles, which distinguish the interactive worksystem, of user and computer, the work it performs and the effectiveness of that performance in terms of task quality and system resource costs. These Principles support HCI Engineering Practices seeking to diagnose design problems and to prescribe design solutions to those problems. Design here is characterised as ‘specify then implement’ designs of users interacting with computers (the interactive worksystem) to perform effective work in some domain of application.

Key concepts, Footnotes and Citations

The HCI/E Conception of the HCI Engineering Discipline comprises (C2): HCI Knowledge as Principles (F1), which distinguish the interactive worksystem, of user and computer, the work it performs and the effectiveness of that performance in terms of task quality and system resource costs. (C3) These Principles support HCI Practices seeking to diagnose design problems and to prescribe design solutions to those problems. (F2) (C1) Design here is characterised as ‘specify then implement’ designs of users interacting with computers (the interactive worksystem) to perform effective work in some domain of application. (F3) (C4)

Key concepts are shown in bold on their first appearance only.

 Footnotes

 (F1) No such Principles exist in the current research and practice of HCI. The HCI/E Conception and frameworks are intended to form the basis, on which such Principles might be constructed in the longer term. A start, however, has been made (Stork (1999) and Cummaford (2007). In the meantime, HCI/E research and practice recruits whatever HCI knowledge is available at present to solve design problems.

(F2) According to the HCI/E Conception, design problems have to be diagnosed (and specified) before they can be solved (and implemented).

(F3) The current absence of HCI Engineering Design Principles, requiring the use of different types of HCI knowledge – see (F1) above –   also requires, in the meantime,  they support different types of practice, for example, ‘trial-and- error; ‘specify and implement’; ‘prototype and test’ etc.

Citations

 Long and Dowell (1989)

(C1) ‘The  (discipline) framework expresses the essential characteristics of the HCI discipline, and can be summarised as: ‘the use of HCI knowledge to support practices seeking solutions to the general problem of HCI’.’ (Page 9, Lines 16-19).

(C2) ‘Two prerequisites of a framework for conceptions of the HCI discipline are assumed. The first is a definition of disciplines appropriate for the expression of HCI. The second is a definition of the province of concern of the HCI discipline which, whilst broad enough to include all disparate aspects, enables the discipline’s boundaries to be identified.’ (Page 11, Lines 18-21).

(C4) ‘The discipline of engineering may characteristically solve its general problem (of design) by the specification of designs before their implementation. It is able to do so because of the prescriptive nature of its discipline knowledge supporting those practices – knowledge formulated as engineering principles.’ (Page 24, Lines 11-14)

Dowell and Long (1989)

(C3) ‘Taken together, the dimension of problem hardness, characterising general design problems, and the dimension of specification completeness, characterising discipline practices, constitute a classification space for design disciplines……..’ (Page 1518, Lines 20-22)

 

3. HCI Engineering Design Knowledge 150 150 John

3. HCI Engineering Design Knowledge

The HCI/E approach is grounded in a Conception of the HCI Engineering Discipline (Long and Dowell (1989) – see Section 1) and of the HCI Engineering Design Problem (Dowell and Long (1989) – see Section 2) – both products of the research. Unlike these two conceptions, however, the HCI/E Conception of Engineering Design Knowledge has no single paper dedicated to its exposure. Rather, it appears throughout the Discipline and Design Problem conception papers. For this reason, 3.5 presents both papers in full and other sections include citations from both papers, where appropriate. Together the two papers present the complete HCI/E Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge.

To make the HCI/E Conception of Engineering Design Knowledge more accessible to a wide range of researchers: a complete expression appears in short versions of the Discipline and Design Problem papers (3.4); a summary version in 3.3; a generalised Engineering version in 3.2; and finally, a generalised HCI version in 3.1. The latter also serves as an introduction to the Conception. Finally, the concepts carried forward by the Conception appear in 3.6 and the EU/UCL research illustrations of HCI Engineering in 3.7.

As appropriate, a version is supported by citations (C) from the original Long and Dowell and Dowell and Long papers, which allows readers to check the derivation of the version from the original. (F) indicates footnotes.

3.1 General Conception of HCI Design Knowledge

The General Conception of HCI Design Knowledge is generalised from the General Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge (3.2)

General Conception of HCI Design Knowledge

3.2 General Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge

The General Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge is generalised from the HCI/E Conception of HCI Design Knowledge (3.3)

General Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge

3.3 HCI/E Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge: a Summary

The HCI/E Conception of HCI Engineering Design is a summary of the complete version – see 3.4 and 3.5.

HCI/E Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge

3.4 Short versions of Long and Dowell (1989) and Dowell and Long (1989)

These two papers together expose the Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge. Short versions of the papers, relevant only to the topic of HCI Design Knowledge, are presented here. Full papers can be accessed via

Long and Dowell (1989) – HCI Engineering Knowledge – Short Version

Dowell and Long (1989) – HCI Engineering Knowledge – Short Version

3.5 Full Versions of Long and Dowell (1989) and Dowell and Long (1989)

Here, the two papers are presented in their entirety, including a complete version of the HCI/E Conception of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge.

Long and Dowell (1989)

Dowell and Long (1989) 

3.6 Concepts Carried Forward

The concepts carried forward in this section are: Design; Knowledge; and Design Knowledge

Design; Knowledge; and Design Knowledge

3.7 Illustrations of HCI Engineering Design Knowledge from EU/UCL Research

3.7.1 Cummaford (2000) Validating Effective Design Knowledge for Re-Use: HCI Engineering Design Principles

Cummaford here applies the HCI/E Conception of Design Knowledge to develop a conception of HCI Engineering Design Principles, as a framework within which systematically to relate design knowledge to performance.Design knowledge is illustrated throughout the paper.

Validating Effective Design Knowledge for Re-Use: HCI Engineering Design Principles

3.7.2 Hill, Long, Smith and Whitefield (1995) Planning for Multiple Task Work – an Analysis of a Medical Reception Worksystem

Hill et al. here apply the HCI/E Conception of Design Knowledge to model different types of plan observed in the work of medical reception – see especially Section 4 Plans and Planning in the Medical Reception Worksystem.

Hill, Long, Smith and Whitefield (1995) Planning for Multiple Task Work – an Analysis of a Medical Reception Worksystem

3.7.3 Hill and Long (1996) A Preliminary Model of the Planning and Control of the Combined Response to Disaster

Hill and Long apply the HCI/E Conception of Design Knowledge to develop a model of the combined response to disaster – see especially PCMT EMCR Model

Hill and Long (1996) A Preliminary Model of the Planning and Control of the Combined Response to Disaster