Articles by Rolf Molich
Mr. Molich manages DialogDesign, a small Danish usability consultancy. He conceived and coordinated the Comparative Usability Evaluation (CUE) studies where more than 140 usability professionals evaluated the same applications. He is the co-inventor of the heuristic inspection method (with Jakob Nielsen). He received the UXPA Lifetime Achievement Award in 2014.
Letter to the Editors of JUX
I appreciate that JUX is publishing papers by promising young UX professionals, such as “Talking About Thinking Aloud: Perspectives from Interactive Think-Aloud Practitioners,” by Liam O’Brien and Stephanie Wilson, in Volume 18, Issue 3, of the Journal of User Experience. The authors of this article are clear about what they did; for example, they interviewed […] [(English) Read More]
(English) How Professionals Moderate Usability Tests
Leider ist der Eintrag nur auf English verfügbar. [(English) Read More]
Rent a Car in Just 0, 60, 240 or 1,217 Seconds? – Comparative Usability Measurement, CUE-8
Abstract This paper reports on the approach and results of CUE-8, the eighth in a series of Comparative Usability Evaluation studies. Fifteen experienced professional usability teams simultaneously and independently measured a baseline for the usability of the car rental website Budget.com. The CUE-8 study documented a wide difference in measurement approaches. Teams that used similar […] [(English) Read More]
A Commentary of “How To Specify the Participant Group Size for Usability Studies: A Practitioner’s Guide” by R. Macefield
pp. 124 – 128 Introduction Today, no usability conference seems to be complete without one or more heated debates on participant group sizes for usability studies (Bevan, 2003; Molich, Bachmann, Biesterfeldt, & Quesenbery, 2010). In this respect, Macefield’s recent article on group sizes for usability tests is timely (Macefield, 2009). However, when reading Macefield’s article […] [(English) Read More]
Making Usability Recommendations Useful and Usable
Abstract This paper evaluates the quality of recommendations for improving a user interface resulting from a usability evaluation. The study compares usability comments written by different authors, but describing similar usability issues. The usability comments were provided by 17 professional teams who independently evaluated the usability of the website for the Hotel Pennsylvania in New […] [(English) Read More]