Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
551698 Interacting with Computers 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present study is part of a research programme that aims to develop and test a psychological model of end-users’ experience with news sites. An exploratory study of interaction experience with a news Web site was conducted. An online questionnaire was used to collect information on demographics, Internet-use and news-site use behaviour of users of a particular news site, and to recruit participants for a think-aloud study. The protocol analysis of screen-capture and audio recordings of participants, who used a news site while thinking aloud, yielded five categories of experience: impression, content, layout, information architecture and diversion. These categories are regarded as spontaneous, self-reported aspects of users’ experience with a news site. A set of interaction-experience questionnaires revealed significant differences between regular users and non-users of a news site. Correlation and regression analyses demonstrated support for Hassenzahl’s model of interaction experience. The study presents a first attempt to empirically investigate the aspects of interaction experience in relation to online news sites.

► Research of interaction experience with news Web sites. ► Protocol analysis of verbal data recorded under think-aloud instructions. ► User-reported aspects of experience derived from verbal recordings. ► Strong differences in experience between users and non-users of a news site. ► Results inform future work on modelling interaction experience with news sites.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Human-Computer Interaction
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