INTERACTIONAL OBJECTS: HCI CONCERNS IN THE ANALYSIS PHASE OF THE SYMPHONY METHOD
Guillaume Godet-Bar, Dominique Rieu, Sophie Dupuy-Chessa, David Juras
2007
Abstract
We present in this paper a set of concepts that extend a design method issued from the Software Engineering domain, in order to take into account Human-Computer Interaction design, in particular for Augmented Reality systems. Previous works focused on the initial phases of development (i.e., Specification phases). Our efforts concentrate on the Analysis phase, into which we have introduced a new concept – Interactional Objects- that allows designers to structure the interactional space, and a specific relation that permits to draw links between the business and interactional spaces. These contributions also enable developers to develop reusable components and encourage code generation.
DownloadPaper Citation
in Harvard Style
Godet-Bar G., Rieu D., Dupuy-Chessa S. and Juras D. (2007). INTERACTIONAL OBJECTS: HCI CONCERNS IN THE ANALYSIS PHASE OF THE SYMPHONY METHOD . In Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems - Volume 5: ICEIS, ISBN 978-972-8865-92-4, pages 37-44. DOI: 10.5220/0002388600370044
in Bibtex Style
@conference{iceis07,
author={Guillaume Godet-Bar and Dominique Rieu and Sophie Dupuy-Chessa and David Juras},
title={INTERACTIONAL OBJECTS: HCI CONCERNS IN THE ANALYSIS PHASE OF THE SYMPHONY METHOD},
booktitle={Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems - Volume 5: ICEIS,},
year={2007},
pages={37-44},
publisher={SciTePress},
organization={INSTICC},
doi={10.5220/0002388600370044},
isbn={978-972-8865-92-4},
}
in EndNote Style
TY - CONF
JO - Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems - Volume 5: ICEIS,
TI - INTERACTIONAL OBJECTS: HCI CONCERNS IN THE ANALYSIS PHASE OF THE SYMPHONY METHOD
SN - 978-972-8865-92-4
AU - Godet-Bar G.
AU - Rieu D.
AU - Dupuy-Chessa S.
AU - Juras D.
PY - 2007
SP - 37
EP - 44
DO - 10.5220/0002388600370044