Designing for usability: key principles and what designers think
Communications of the ACM
Cardboard computers: mocking-it-up or hands-on the future
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Participatory analysis of flexibility
Communications of the ACM
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Scenario-based design
Participatory analysis: shared development of requirements from scenarios
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCHI Conference on Human factors in computing systems
Contextual design: defining customer-centered systems
Contextual design: defining customer-centered systems
Layered participatory analysis: new developments in the CARD technique
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
User-developer cooperation in software development: building common round and usable systems
User-developer cooperation in software development: building common round and usable systems
Easing the wait in the emergency room: building a theory of public information systems
DIS '04 Proceedings of the 5th conference on Designing interactive systems: processes, practices, methods, and techniques
Representations and user-developer interaction in cooperative analysis and design
Human-Computer Interaction
The challenges in creating tools for improving the software development lifecycle
HSSE '05 Proceedings of the 2005 workshop on Human and social factors of software engineering
Pragmatics of storyboarding for web information systems: usage analysis
International Journal of Web and Grid Services
A mobile spatial messaging service for a grassroots environmental network
Journal of Location Based Services
Proceedings of the seventh ACM conference on Creativity and cognition
Conceptual application domain modelling
APCCM '09 Proceedings of the Sixth Asia-Pacific Conference on Conceptual Modeling - Volume 96
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Participatory Task Modelling (PTM) is an approach to systems development that combines the strengths of the task analysis and participatory design traditions. This paper briefly reviews the strengths and weaknesses of standard participatory design and task analysis methods and presents PTM as a practical approach that integrates the best of both. We describe techniques for the participatory development of models of the users' current tasks and domain and models of their envisioned tasks in an enhanced domain. The paper concludes with a discussion of a range of tools and representations used in PTM.