Culture and Usability Evaluation: The Effects of Culture in Structured Interviews

Peer-reviewed Article

pp. 156-170

No PDF available for download.

Abstract

A major impediment in global user interface development is that there is inadequate empirical evidence for the effects of culture in the usability engineering methods used for developing these global user interfaces. This paper presents a controlled study investigating the effects of culture on the effectiveness of structured interviews in international usability evaluation. The experiment consisted of a usability evaluation of a website with two independent groups of Indian participants. Each group had a different interviewer; one belonging to the Indian culture and the other to the Anglo-American culture. The results show that participants found more usability problems and made more suggestions to an interviewer who was a member of the same (Indian) culture than to the foreign (Anglo-American) interviewer. The results of the study empirically establish that culture significantly affects the efficacy of structured interviews during international user testing. The implications of this work for usability engineering are discussed.

Practitioner’s Take Away

  • Cultural mismatch between the interviewer and the users affects the usability assessment technique of structured interviews.
  • Interviewers from the same culture might be more effective in eliciting usability problems in when users come from hierarchical cultures.
  • Hofstede’s cultural dimensions model can be used to inform the selection of usability assessment techniques cross-cultural user testing.
  • Culture might influence the efficacy of a usability method that involves high degree of social interaction.
  • Considering culture in the usability evaluation process will lead to better informed products and services.