CUES: Cognitive Usability Evaluation System
EuroHCIR 2012, July 2012
Matthew Pike, Max L. Wilson, Anna Divoli, Alyona Medelyan. 2012. CUES: Cognitive Usability Evaluation System. In EuroHCIR 2012.
Matthew Pike and Max L. Wilson and Anna Divoli and Alyona Medelyan. (2012). CUES: Cognitive Usability Evaluation System. EuroHCIR 2012.
Matthew Pike and Max L. Wilson and Anna Divoli and Alyona Medelyan. "CUES: Cognitive Usability Evaluation System." EuroHCIR 2012, 2012.
Matthew Pike, Max L. Wilson, Anna Divoli, Alyona Medelyan. 2012. CUES: Cognitive Usability Evaluation System. EuroHCIR 2012.
Matthew Pike and Max L. Wilson and Anna Divoli and Alyona Medelyan, "CUES: Cognitive Usability Evaluation System," EuroHCIR 2012, 2012.
@inproceedings{ehci-2012,
title={CUES: Cognitive Usability Evaluation System},
author={Matthew Pike and Max L. Wilson and Anna Divoli and Alyona Medelyan},
booktitle={EuroHCIR 2012},
year={2012}
}
EEG, Usability Testing, Cognitive Load, Brain-Computer Interfaces, Information Seeking
Abstract
A Cognitive Usability Evaluation System (CUES) was developed to integrate cognitive data from a commercial EEG brain scanner with other usability measures, such as interaction logs, screen capture, and think-aloud protocols. CUES was iteratively evaluated to assess its value in usability studies. Results indicate that while the EEG scanner provided various objective measurements, its greatest value came from qualitatively identifying EEG patterns and correlating them with think-aloud data. This paper outlines the system, its features, and the findings from its evaluation, offering insights into the use of brain data in usability research.