Usability-enhanced coordination design of geovisualisations to communicate coastal flood risk information


Autoria(s): Huang, Haibo
Contribuinte(s)

Bartlett, Darius

Hong, Fan

College of Arts, Celtic Studies and Social Sciences, University College Cork

Data(s)

03/03/2014

03/03/2014

2014

2014

Resumo

For at least two millennia and probably much longer, the traditional vehicle for communicating geographical information to end-users has been the map. With the advent of computers, the means of both producing and consuming maps have radically been transformed, while the inherent nature of the information product has also expanded and diversified rapidly. This has given rise in recent years to the new concept of geovisualisation (GVIS), which draws on the skills of the traditional cartographer, but extends them into three spatial dimensions and may also add temporality, photorealistic representations and/or interactivity. Demand for GVIS technologies and their applications has increased significantly in recent years, driven by the need to study complex geographical events and in particular their associated consequences and to communicate the results of these studies to a diversity of audiences and stakeholder groups. GVIS has data integration, multi-dimensional spatial display advanced modelling techniques, dynamic design and development environments and field-specific application needs. To meet with these needs, GVIS tools should be both powerful and inherently usable, in order to facilitate their role in helping interpret and communicate geographic problems. However no framework currently exists for ensuring this usability. The research presented here seeks to fill this gap, by addressing the challenges of incorporating user requirements in GVIS tool design. It starts from the premise that usability in GVIS should be incorporated and implemented throughout the whole design and development process. To facilitate this, Subject Technology Matching (STM) is proposed as a new approach to assessing and interpreting user requirements. Based on STM, a new design framework called Usability Enhanced Coordination Design (UECD) is ten presented with the purpose of leveraging overall usability of the design outputs. UECD places GVIS experts in a new key role in the design process, to form a more coordinated and integrated workflow and a more focused and interactive usability testing. To prove the concept, these theoretical elements of the framework have been implemented in two test projects: one is the creation of a coastal inundation simulation for Whitegate, Cork, Ireland; the other is a flooding mapping tool for Zhushan Town, Jiangsu, China. The two case studies successfully demonstrated the potential merits of the UECD approach when GVIS techniques are applied to geographic problem solving and decision making. The thesis delivers a comprehensive understanding of the development and challenges of GVIS technology, its usability concerns, usability and associated UCD; it explores the possibility of putting UCD framework in GVIS design; it constructs a new theoretical design framework called UECD which aims to make the whole design process usability driven; it develops the key concept of STM into a template set to improve the performance of a GVIS design. These key conceptual and procedural foundations can be built on future research, aimed at further refining and developing UECD as a useful design methodology for GVIS scholars and practitioners.

Accepted Version

Not peer reviewed

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

Huang, H. 2014. Usability-enhanced coordination design of geovisualisations to communicate coastal flood risk information. PhD Thesis, University College Cork.

317

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1424

Idioma(s)

en

en

Publicador

University College Cork

Direitos

© 2014, Haibo Huang.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

Palavras-Chave #Geovisualisation #Usability #Flood #Geographic information system #Subject-technology matching #Geographic information systems--Software #Floods--China #Floods--Ireland
Tipo

Doctoral thesis

Doctoral

PhD (Arts)