• J Biomed Inform · Oct 2017

    Combining multivariate statistics and the think-aloud protocol to assess Human-Computer Interaction barriers in symptom checkers.

    • Luis Marco-Ruiz, Erlend Bønes, Estela de la Asunción, Elia Gabarron, Juan Carlos Aviles-Solis, Eunji Lee, Vicente Traver, Keiichi Sato, and Johan G Bellika.
    • Norwegian Centre for E-health Research, University Hospital of North Norway, P.O. Box 35, N-9038 Tromsø, Norway; Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, UIT The Arctic University of Norway, 9037 Tromsø, Norway. Electronic address: luis.marco.ruiz@ehealthresearch.no.
    • J Biomed Inform. 2017 Oct 1; 74: 104-122.

    AbstractSymptom checkers are software tools that allow users to submit a set of symptoms and receive advice related to them in the form of a diagnosis list, health information or triage. The heterogeneity of their potential users and the number of different components in their user interfaces can make testing with end-users unaffordable. We designed and executed a two-phase method to test the respiratory diseases module of the symptom checker Erdusyk. Phase I consisted of an online test with a large sample of users (n=53). In Phase I, users evaluated the system remotely and completed a questionnaire based on the Technology Acceptance Model. Principal Component Analysis was used to correlate each section of the interface with the questionnaire responses, thus identifying which areas of the user interface presented significant contributions to the technology acceptance. In the second phase, the think-aloud procedure was executed with a small number of samples (n=15), focusing on the areas with significant contributions to analyze the reasons for such contributions. Our method was used effectively to optimize the testing of symptom checker user interfaces. The method allowed kept the cost of testing at reasonable levels by restricting the use of the think-aloud procedure while still assuring a high amount of coverage. The main barriers detected in Erdusyk were related to problems understanding time repetition patterns, the selection of levels in scales to record intensities, navigation, the quantification of some symptom attributes, and the characteristics of the symptoms.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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