• DocumentCode
    265910
  • Title

    How many participants are really enough for usability studies?

  • Author

    AlRoobaea, Roobaea ; Mayhew, Pam J.

  • Author_Institution
    Coll. of Comput. & Inf. Technol., Taif Univ., Ta´if, Saudi Arabia
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    27-29 Aug. 2014
  • Firstpage
    48
  • Lastpage
    56
  • Abstract
    The growth of the Internet and related technologies has enabled the development of a new breed of dynamic websites, applications and software products that are growing rapidly in use and that have had a great impact on many businesses. These technologies need to be continuously evaluated by usability evaluation methods (UEMs) to measure their efficiency and effectiveness, to assess user satisfaction, and ultimately to improve their quality. However, estimating the sample sizes for these methods has become the source of considerable debate at usability conferences. This paper aims to determine an appropriate sample size through empirical studies on the social network and educational domains by employing three types of UEM; it also examines further the impact of sample size on the findings of usability tests. Moreover, this paper quantifies the sample size required for the Domain Specific-to-context Inspection (DSI) method, which itself is developed through an adaptive framework. The results show that there is no certain number of participants for finding all usability problems; however, the rule of 16 4 users gains much validity in user testing. The magic number of five evaluators fails to find 80% of problems in heuristic evaluation, whereas three evaluators are enough to find 91% of usability problems in the DSI method.
  • Keywords
    Internet; Web sites; program testing; software reusability; DSI method; Internet; UEM; domain specific-to-context inspection method; dynamic Websites; educational domains; social network; software products; usability evaluation methods; user testing; Computers; Educational institutions; Estimation; Human computer interaction; Social network services; Testing; Usability; Domain Specific Inspection (DSI); Heuristic evaluation (HE); User Testing (UT); methodological framework; sample size;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Science and Information Conference (SAI), 2014
  • Conference_Location
    London
  • Print_ISBN
    978-0-9893-1933-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/SAI.2014.6918171
  • Filename
    6918171