DocumentCode
257648
Title
Building a National E-Service using Sentire experience report on the use of Sentire: A volere-based requirements framework driven by calibrated personas and simulated user feedback
Author
Porter, C. ; Letier, Emmanuel ; Sasse, M. Angela
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. Coll. London, London, UK
fYear
2014
fDate
25-29 Aug. 2014
Firstpage
374
Lastpage
383
Abstract
User experience (UX) is difficult to quantify and thus more challenging to require and guarantee. It is also difficult to gauge the potential impact on users´ lived experience, especially at the earlier stages of the development life cycle, particularly before hi fidelity prototypes are developed. We believe that the enrolment process is a major hurdle for e-government service adoption and badly designed processes might result in negative repercussions for both the policy maker and the different user groups involved; non-adoption and resentment are two risks that may result in low return on investment (ROI), lost political goodwill and ultimately a negative lived experience for citizens. Identity assurance requirements need to balance out the real value of the assets being secured (risk) with the user groups´ acceptance thresholds (based on a continuous cost-benefit exercise factoring in cognitive and physical workload). Sentire is a persona-centric requirements framework built on and extending the Volere requirements process with UX-analytics, reusable user behavioural models and simulated user feedback through calibrated personas. In this paper we present a story on how Sentire was adopted in the development of a national public-facing e-service. Daily journaling was used throughout the project and a custom built cloud-based CASE tool was used to manage the whole process. This paper outlines our experiences and lessons learnt.
Keywords
cloud computing; cost-benefit analysis; government data processing; ROI; Sentire experience report; UX-analytics; calibrated personas; cloud-based CASE tool; continuous cost-benefit exercise factoring; development life cycle; e-government service adoption; identity assurance requirements; low return on investment; national public e-service; negative lived experience; persona-centric requirement framework; reusable user behavioural models; simulated user feedback; user group acceptance thresholds; user lived experience; volere-based requirement framework; Calibration; Computer aided software engineering; Educational institutions; Electronic government; Predictive models; Usability; Personas; Requirements engineering for user experience; Sentire; Volere; enrolment process; industry and research collaboration; usability;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Requirements Engineering Conference (RE), 2014 IEEE 22nd International
Conference_Location
Karlskrona
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-3031-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/RE.2014.6912288
Filename
6912288
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