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Topics in Human-Computer Interaction: User Research for Interactive Systems (Seminar)
Course Information (Winter Semester 2025/26)
This website provides an overview of the seminar. For official course details, enrollment information, and materials, please refer to the university course catalogue.
Instructor: Mr. James Simpson
Introduction Session: Wednesday October 15th at 4 PM; Lecture Hall I (HS V, MZG) 04A20 (HS V A4) (Seminarraum)
Weekly Seminar: Every Wednesday between 4 PM and 5:30 PM; Lecture Hall I (HS V, MZG) 04A20 (HS V A4) (Seminarraum). Weekly attendance required (aside from 2 weeks which may be taken off due to illness/personal reasons)
Assessment:
- Seminar Presentation (20-30 min)
- User Research Study Paper (~10 pages)
Target Audience
Bachelor/Master students in Computer Science and Data Science (maximum 15 participants)
Prerequisites
Recommended: Statistics knowledge. Openness to reading empirical literature on user research and to applying user research methods to practice.
Course Overview
Everyday life is full of interactive systems—apps on our phones, AI chatbots like ChatGPT, and complex software systems to name but a few. These systems rely on core areas of Computer Science such as graphics, databases, and machine learning. Yet, technical efficiency alone doesn't tell us whether people actually find these systems useful, usable, or enjoyable.
This seminar will give you hands-on experience in studying how people use technology. You will learn practical methods to design, run, and analyze user studies that reveal how effectively interactive systems support real users. Topics include experiment design, data collection, usability testing, and interpreting results.
Topics Covered
Students will explore user research along four themes:
User Research Ethics & Data Privacy
- User Research Ethics & Data Privacy Framework
- User Research Ethics Process
- Conducting User Research at Ethical Boundaries
User Research Study Design
- Defining the Research Question(s)
- Independent & Dependent Variables
- Participant Sampling
- Experimental Procedure
User Research Methodologies
- Conventional User Studies
- Questionnaire Based User Research
- Interview Based User Research
- Automated User Research Methods
- Quick n’ Dirty User Research Methods
Reporting User Research Findings
- Quantitative Data Analysis
- Qualitative Data Analyzing
- Writing User Research Papers