scom 5056 design theory in science communication week 3: user experience (part 1) dave goforth fa377...

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SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs . laurentian .ca

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Page 1: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

SCOM 5056Design Theory

inScience Communication

week 3: user experience (part 1)

Dave GoforthFA377 (Fraser)

705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Page 2: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

How to designscience communication

Many formats (Gregory and Miller)

How to organize / categorize

By media? Broadcast, live, text,…

By audience? Kids, voters, donors,…

By content? Quarks, beetles,…

By context? Policy, entertainment,…

By user experience

Page 3: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Audience experience

Sequential Exploratory

User control moreless

spatiallinear

individualized moreless

content representation deepshallow

Page 4: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Design space

content context audience goal

Knowledge design

experience

A r t e f a c t s

…examples…

Page 5: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

ArtifactsImmutable Interactive

Sequential Exploratory

User control moreless

spatiallinear

individualized moreless

content representation deepshallow

Page 6: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Immutable artifactsBased on the knowledge structure,design the experience

– The sequence the user follows is a path through the knowledge structure

– The artifact is fixed but the user still has some control over the experience

spatiallinear

Page 7: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Knowledge structure: Possible paths• starting point(s) [Giere, Reigeluth, ...]

– background knowledge– basic concepts

extension– prerequisites satisfied

Page 8: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Clouds exampletype

high low medium

cirro-cumulus

cumulus stratus alto-cumulus

strato-cumuluscirrus

Page 9: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Clouds example

Article about clouds

1 intro

2 cumulus

3 stratus

type

high low medium

cirro-cumulus

cumulus stratus alto-cumulus

strato-cumuluscirrus

4 stratocumulus5 low clouds6 high clouds7 cirrus …

The sequence the user follows is a path through the knowledge structure

Page 10: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Clouds exampleArticle about clouds

1 intro

2 cumulus

3 stratus

4 stratocumulus5 low clouds6 high clouds7 cirrus …

The artifact is fixed but the user still has some control over the experience:

skip sections, reread, quit, …

Page 11: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

User control

Article in different formats:

user control of what?

how much user control?

1. radio broadcast

2. podcast

3. newspaper article

4. file .pdf

5. Word .doc

Page 12: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

User control

Article in different formats:

user control of what? time

how much user control? pace• radio broadcast access• podcast format• newspaper article content• file .pdf• Word .doc (Not immutable)

Page 13: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Considering user control in artifact design

sequence of content (e.g., repetition?)

support material(e.g., diagrams)

writing style(e.g., paragraph length)

• time

• pace

• access

• format

• …

• time

• pace

• access

• format

• …

Page 14: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Dimensions of immutable artifacts: examples

Space\Time no yes

0 (point) flash card radio broadcast

1 (linear) printed text oscilloscope

2 (planar) diagram TV broadcast

3 (spatial) model of molecule Virtual Voyages

Page 15: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

DimensionsSpace\Time no yes

0 (point) flash card radio broadcast

1 (linear) printed text oscilloscope

2 (planar) diagram TV broadcast

3 (spatial) model of molecule

Virtual Voyages

user controls time (pace and sequence)

creator designsa linear sequence

to be followedby each user

creator designs a spacethrough which

users create their ownunique sequence

creator controls time (pace and sequence)

Page 16: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

15 cm.

10 cm.

Design and Experience

Linear

“Above the hinge is a

thin rod of length 10

cm., below it a thicker

rod of length 15 cm.”

Spatial

Page 17: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

15 cm.

10 cm.

Design and Experience

Linear

“Above the hinge is a

thin rod of length 10

cm., below it a thicker

rod of length 15 cm.”

Spatial

Page 18: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Linear designs

• knowledge structure highlights prerequisites– possible paths

• Norris et al - use of narrative form, explanation forms

• Mayer - enhancing learning in linear format by constructivist principles

Page 19: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Possible paths, good paths

Free choice learning Path must be engaging if user is to

continue to follow it…How to make an interesting presentation?

One important form is narrative

– “telling a good story”

Page 20: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Mayer: improving effectiveness based on constructivist learning

goal – improve learning at each stage(i) selection,

(ii) organization,

(iii) integration of knowledge

How bad is that lightning example?

Page 21: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Mayer – encourage selection

• formatting (bold, colour, italics,...)

• explicit objectives and questions

• summaries

• elimination of irrelevant information– Mayer’s first name is Richard

match strategies to media:

radio, podcast, print, html, pdf, textfile

match strategies to media:

radio, podcast, print, html, pdf, textfile

Page 22: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Mayer – encourage organization

• structures within text– compare/contrast, classify, enumerate, ...

• headings

• outlines

• graphic representations

• signal words (transitions – “as a result”)

match strategies to media:

radio, podcast, print, html, pdf, textfile

match strategies to media:

radio, podcast, print, html, pdf, textfile

Page 23: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Mayer – encourage integration

• advance organizers• captioned illustrations• examples• animations• elaborative questions (transfer)

Where does “narrative explanation” fit in this model of design?

match strategies to media:

radio, podcast, print, html, pdf, textfile

match strategies to media:

radio, podcast, print, html, pdf, textfile

Page 24: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Norris et al – narrative explanation

• Categorizing scientific explanation by the type-token distinction– Experimental – predictable and repeatable– Historical – ‘unique and unrepeatable’

• Scientific explanation types – Table 2– 8 forms (compare to Toulmin et al)

• Claim:– Narrative explanation is a legitimate model for

(some) scientific explanation, particularly for historical science

Page 25: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Scientific explanation

• Explanation is difficult to define

“make something clear, understandable, or intelligible”

• Many different types

“explain” can meanDevelop meaning, justify, describe,

ascribe cause or purpose

Page 26: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Explanations – p 550• Interpretive• Justificatory• Descriptive• Deductive-nomological• Statistical• Functional• Explanatory unification• Pragmatic• Narrative

My version

JFUF

JFUE

JDUDDecomposition

Elaboration

Function

Und

erst

andi

ngJu

stifi

catio

n

Page 27: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Narrative formsSequence of events

Annal chronological order minutes

Chronicle single subject professional journal article

Narrative perspective – looking back connection between events –> change

Logico-scientific

prediction “Universal truth” context

Nature article

Page 28: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Narrative Explanation - story

narrative elements – p.5451. events2. narrator3. narrative appetite4. past time *5. structure6. agency7. purpose8. reader

Page 29: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Narrative explanation

• Set of events that is connected and complete (all the knowledge)

• Put events in sequence to create ‘a good story’

Page 30: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example – simple murder mystery

Murder story

Detective story

What the reader knows

Page 31: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example – simple murder mystery

Murder story

Detective story

Detective goes to murder scene

Page 32: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example – simple murder mystery

Murder story

Detective story

Detective gets background information

Page 33: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example – simple murder mystery

Murder story

Detective story

Detective goes to second murder scene

Page 34: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example – simple murder mystery

Murder story

Detective story

Detective gets more information

Page 35: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example – simple murder mystery

Murder story

Detective story

Detective gets vital information

Page 36: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example – simple murder mystery

Murder story

Detective story

Detective arrests suspect

Page 37: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example – simple murder mystery

Murder story

Detective story

Detective reveals clever inferences at trial

Page 38: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example – simple murder mystery

Murder story

Detective story

Detective explains final details over drinks

Page 39: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Example: An Inconvenient Truth

chapter 9

Al Gore discusses the concentration of CO2

Page 40: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Where can narrative apply?

appreciate

How science works

experimental

historical

Narrative explanation applies?

Page 41: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

2-Dimensional Designs:diagrams, charts, pictures, tables

Two tasks

1. Represent information in 2-D design

2. Assist user in creating a sequence for exploring, interpreting and understanding the artefact

Page 42: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Representing information

Information can be coded with:• 2 dimensions of spacial represenetation:

up-down, left-right• illusory third dimension• “point” symbols with features

(size, colour, shape…)• “line” edges connecting points• 2 Dimensions of “small multiples”• Captions, labels

Page 43: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

2-D Example:Map

• dimension: North-south• dimension: East-west• illusory dimension:

land/water/urban• points (town)• lines (highway)• labels (highway number)

Page 44: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Identify dimensions, points, lines,

labels

Page 45: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Huygens’ drawings of Saturn

Dimensions: up down, left right

Illusory dimension:

light dark

Small multiple: time

Page 46: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Dimensions “2 ½-D”: north-south, east-west,land/water, gas concentration

Lines: urban boundaries

Small multiple: gas

Small multiple: time

Page 47: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Designing symbols: lines and points

• Colour

• Size

• Shape

• Orientation

Page 48: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

What features?

Page 49: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Illusory dimension:• Perspective• OrthographicSupporting illusion• Occlusion• Size• Colour/light

Page 50: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Guiding users

Help user to

• Scan

• Interpret

• Understand / “chunk”

Page 51: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

ScanNon-linear format

1. Where to focus attention first?

– Cultural habits– Attractive symbol

2. Where to look next?– Cultural habits– Implied direction

Cultual habit-based on text sequence

-e.g., in western culture

Start at top left

Proceed left to right, top to bottom

Page 52: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

ScanNon-linear format

1. Where to focus attention first?

– Cultural habits– Attractive symbol

2. Where to look next?– Cultural habits– Implied direction

By design

Attractive symbol

-(relative) features

-(relative) position

Implied direction

-relation to current focus

Page 53: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Scan – focus attention

Colour

Size

Shape

Orientation

Isolation

Complexity

Page 54: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Scan – next focus

Page 55: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

InterpretDimensions and properties

are the vocabulary of the artefact

Help target audience attach meaning

•conventions, e.g., time as horizontal axis

•labels and legends

•implication by symbols (risky), e.g., ,

•emphasis, e.g., by size

Page 56: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Interpret

Page 57: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Understand

Reading the message in the artefact

•Repeated meaning in multiple forms

•Text captions:

•Instructive

•Descriptive

•Supplementary

•Amplifying

Page 58: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Understand

A diagram explaining how the power line in a home can be used to create a computer network

How is understanding facilitated?

Page 59: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Data graphs

• form – line, bar, ...

• format – colour, labels, grids, legends

• clutter – distraction, misinformation

You can make decent graphs with Excel.

Page 60: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca
Page 61: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca
Page 62: SCOM 5056 Design Theory in Science Communication week 3: user experience (part 1) Dave Goforth FA377 (Fraser) 705-675-1151 ext 2316 dgoforth@cs. laurentian.ca

Pioneer plaque