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Human/Computer Interaction

Module name (EN):
Name of module in study programme. It should be precise and clear.
Human/Computer Interaction
Degree programme:
Study Programme with validity of corresponding study regulations containing this module.
Applied Informatics, Master, ASPO 01.10.2011
Module code: PIM-WI30
Hours per semester week / Teaching method:
The count of hours per week is a combination of lecture (V for German Vorlesung), exercise (U for Übung), practice (P) oder project (PA). For example a course of the form 2V+2U has 2 hours of lecture and 2 hours of exercise per week.
4V (4 hours per week)
ECTS credits:
European Credit Transfer System. Points for successful completion of a course. Each ECTS point represents a workload of 30 hours.
5
Semester: 1
Mandatory course: no
Language of instruction:
German
Assessment:
Written examination

[updated 08.05.2008]
Applicability / Curricular relevance:
All study programs (with year of the version of study regulations) containing the course.

PIM-WI30 Applied Informatics, Master, ASPO 01.10.2011 , semester 1, optional course
Workload:
Workload of student for successfully completing the course. Each ECTS credit represents 30 working hours. These are the combined effort of face-to-face time, post-processing the subject of the lecture, exercises and preparation for the exam.

The total workload is distributed on the semester (01.04.-30.09. during the summer term, 01.10.-31.03. during the winter term).
60 class hours (= 45 clock hours) over a 15-week period.
The total student study time is 150 hours (equivalent to 5 ECTS credits).
There are therefore 105 hours available for class preparation and follow-up work and exam preparation.
Recommended prerequisites (modules):
None.
Recommended as prerequisite for:
Module coordinator:
Prof. Dr. Ralf Denzer
Lecturer:
Prof. Steven Frysinger


[updated 19.07.2007]
Learning outcomes:
This course will: (a) make the system developer aware of the human aspects of the system, including the peculiar cognitive and perceptual attributes of the human being; (b) provide the developer with design criteria and guidelines which will help to produce effective interactive computer systems; and (c) teach the developer how to quantitatively test the human/computer interface in a rigorous way, as part of the testing of the rest of the system.

[updated 08.05.2008]
Module content:
Computer systems are embedded in virtually every aspect of our modern life, from the database systems that help us run our businesses down to the cellular/mobile telephones on which we have come to depend for daily personal communication. But developers of these tools frequently forget that the human being is part of the computer system, because essentially all of these systems depend on human interaction of some sort to produce the desired end result. In order to overcome this we must educate computer system developers about the nature of the human/computer interface (HCI) and give them tools with which to design and test effective interfaces in the systems which they develop.

[updated 08.05.2008]
Recommended or required reading:
Price, Jennifer / Rogers, Yvonne /Sharp, Helen: Interaction Design. John Wiley and Sons 2002

[updated 08.05.2008]
[Sun Dec 22 06:22:26 CET 2024, CKEY=phi, BKEY=pim, CID=PIM-WI30, LANGUAGE=en, DATE=22.12.2024]