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- Think_aloud_protocol abstract "Think-aloud protocol (or think-aloud protocols, or TAP; also talk-aloud protocol) is a method used to gather data in usability testing in product design and development, in psychology and a range of social sciences (e.g., reading, writing, translation research, decision making, and process tracing). The think-aloud method was introduced in the usability field by Clayton Lewis while he was at IBM, and is explained in Task-Centered User Interface Design: A Practical Introduction by C. Lewis and J. Rieman. The method was developed based on the techniques of protocol analysis by Ericsson and Simon.Think-aloud protocols involve participants thinking aloud as they are performing a set of specified tasks. Users are asked to say whatever they are looking at, thinking, doing, and feeling as they go about their task. This enables observers to see first-hand the process of task completion (rather than only its final product). Observers at such a test are asked to objectively take notes of everything that users say, without attempting to interpret their actions and words. Test sessions are often audio- and video-recorded so that developers can go back and refer to what participants did and how they reacted. The purpose of this method is to make explicit what is implicitly present in subjects who are able to perform a specific task.A related but slightly different data-gathering method is the talk-aloud protocol. This involves participants only describing their action but not giving explanations. This method is thought to be more objective in that participants merely report how they go about completing a task rather than interpreting or justifying their actions (see the standard works by Ericsson & Simon).As Kuusela and Paul state the think-aloud protocol can be divided into two different experimental procedures. The first one is the concurrent think-aloud protocol, collected during the decision task. The second procedure is the retrospective think-aloud protocol, gathered after the decision task.".
- Think_aloud_protocol wikiPageID "284283".
- Think_aloud_protocol wikiPageRevisionID "593180345".
- Think_aloud_protocol hasPhotoCollection Think_aloud_protocol.
- Think_aloud_protocol subject Category:Human–computer_interaction.
- Think_aloud_protocol subject Category:Software_testing.
- Think_aloud_protocol subject Category:Usability.
- Think_aloud_protocol comment "Think-aloud protocol (or think-aloud protocols, or TAP; also talk-aloud protocol) is a method used to gather data in usability testing in product design and development, in psychology and a range of social sciences (e.g., reading, writing, translation research, decision making, and process tracing). The think-aloud method was introduced in the usability field by Clayton Lewis while he was at IBM, and is explained in Task-Centered User Interface Design: A Practical Introduction by C.".
- Think_aloud_protocol label "Méthode de la pensée à voix haute".
- Think_aloud_protocol label "Think aloud protocol".
- Think_aloud_protocol label "Thinking Aloud Test".
- Think_aloud_protocol label "出声思维法".
- Think_aloud_protocol sameAs Thinking_Aloud_Test.
- Think_aloud_protocol sameAs Méthode_de_la_pensée_à_voix_haute.
- Think_aloud_protocol sameAs m.01ptdg.
- Think_aloud_protocol sameAs Q391810.
- Think_aloud_protocol sameAs Q391810.
- Think_aloud_protocol wasDerivedFrom Think_aloud_protocol?oldid=593180345.
- Think_aloud_protocol isPrimaryTopicOf Think_aloud_protocol.