際際滷shows by User: JenniferCham / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: JenniferCham / Mon, 18 May 2020 16:15:23 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: JenniferCham A visual vocabulary for your UX in Life Science project /slideshow/a-visual-vocabulary-for-your-ux-in-life-science-project/234208416 chamjennyvisualvocabworkshopmay2019-200518161524
Working at the boundary between UX and science requires specific tools and language to communicate most effectively. Audiences must be convinced that UX can deliver impressive end user experiences, whilst also being sensitive to the complex needs of the scientific research environment. UXers also need to ensure that results get noticed and remembered by managers, teams and clients, who may be unfamiliar with the value of UX. One innovative way to boost such engagement is by using bespoke collections of visual symbols in your UX deliverables and communication. These can improve understanding of key concepts and retention of critical information for projects and processes. The visuals need to be relevant and appealing, but do not have to be artistically elaborate to benefit the message. They can be included in UX business reports, presentations, pitches, meetings, social media and more. These visual cues can encompass objects, actions and even emotions - all recognised components of the users experience. In this session, you will have the opportunity to explore a ready-made library of visual icons for business, and adapt them to work for your own project or process. Working in small teams, you will choose a central concept from your current project(s) and derive brand new combo visuals, which you can photograph and apply right away in your own documents. This is a fun session planned to suit both verbal and visual thinkers. No prior artistic or drawing skills are required.]]>

Working at the boundary between UX and science requires specific tools and language to communicate most effectively. Audiences must be convinced that UX can deliver impressive end user experiences, whilst also being sensitive to the complex needs of the scientific research environment. UXers also need to ensure that results get noticed and remembered by managers, teams and clients, who may be unfamiliar with the value of UX. One innovative way to boost such engagement is by using bespoke collections of visual symbols in your UX deliverables and communication. These can improve understanding of key concepts and retention of critical information for projects and processes. The visuals need to be relevant and appealing, but do not have to be artistically elaborate to benefit the message. They can be included in UX business reports, presentations, pitches, meetings, social media and more. These visual cues can encompass objects, actions and even emotions - all recognised components of the users experience. In this session, you will have the opportunity to explore a ready-made library of visual icons for business, and adapt them to work for your own project or process. Working in small teams, you will choose a central concept from your current project(s) and derive brand new combo visuals, which you can photograph and apply right away in your own documents. This is a fun session planned to suit both verbal and visual thinkers. No prior artistic or drawing skills are required.]]>
Mon, 18 May 2020 16:15:23 GMT /slideshow/a-visual-vocabulary-for-your-ux-in-life-science-project/234208416 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) A visual vocabulary for your UX in Life Science project JenniferCham Working at the boundary between UX and science requires specific tools and language to communicate most effectively. Audiences must be convinced that UX can deliver impressive end user experiences, whilst also being sensitive to the complex needs of the scientific research environment. UXers also need to ensure that results get noticed and remembered by managers, teams and clients, who may be unfamiliar with the value of UX. One innovative way to boost such engagement is by using bespoke collections of visual symbols in your UX deliverables and communication. These can improve understanding of key concepts and retention of critical information for projects and processes. The visuals need to be relevant and appealing, but do not have to be artistically elaborate to benefit the message. They can be included in UX business reports, presentations, pitches, meetings, social media and more. These visual cues can encompass objects, actions and even emotions - all recognised components of the users experience. In this session, you will have the opportunity to explore a ready-made library of visual icons for business, and adapt them to work for your own project or process. Working in small teams, you will choose a central concept from your current project(s) and derive brand new combo visuals, which you can photograph and apply right away in your own documents. This is a fun session planned to suit both verbal and visual thinkers. No prior artistic or drawing skills are required. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/chamjennyvisualvocabworkshopmay2019-200518161524-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Working at the boundary between UX and science requires specific tools and language to communicate most effectively. Audiences must be convinced that UX can deliver impressive end user experiences, whilst also being sensitive to the complex needs of the scientific research environment. UXers also need to ensure that results get noticed and remembered by managers, teams and clients, who may be unfamiliar with the value of UX. One innovative way to boost such engagement is by using bespoke collections of visual symbols in your UX deliverables and communication. These can improve understanding of key concepts and retention of critical information for projects and processes. The visuals need to be relevant and appealing, but do not have to be artistically elaborate to benefit the message. They can be included in UX business reports, presentations, pitches, meetings, social media and more. These visual cues can encompass objects, actions and even emotions - all recognised components of the users experience. In this session, you will have the opportunity to explore a ready-made library of visual icons for business, and adapt them to work for your own project or process. Working in small teams, you will choose a central concept from your current project(s) and derive brand new combo visuals, which you can photograph and apply right away in your own documents. This is a fun session planned to suit both verbal and visual thinkers. No prior artistic or drawing skills are required.
A visual vocabulary for your UX in Life Science project from Jennifer Cham
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A User Experience Toolkit for Life Science /slideshow/a-user-experience-toolkit-for-life-science/102606787 ib2018jchamrothamstedfinaltoshare-180618154305
From IB2018: Integrative Bioinformatics Symposium 2018 held at Rothamsted Research UK on 15 June 2018 https://easychair.org/cfp/IB2018]]>

From IB2018: Integrative Bioinformatics Symposium 2018 held at Rothamsted Research UK on 15 June 2018 https://easychair.org/cfp/IB2018]]>
Mon, 18 Jun 2018 15:43:05 GMT /slideshow/a-user-experience-toolkit-for-life-science/102606787 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) A User Experience Toolkit for Life Science JenniferCham From IB2018: Integrative Bioinformatics Symposium 2018 held at Rothamsted Research UK on 15 June 2018 https://easychair.org/cfp/IB2018 <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ib2018jchamrothamstedfinaltoshare-180618154305-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> From IB2018: Integrative Bioinformatics Symposium 2018 held at Rothamsted Research UK on 15 June 2018 https://easychair.org/cfp/IB2018
A User Experience Toolkit for Life Science from Jennifer Cham
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Advancing drug discovery and gaining competitive advantage through user experience (UX) /slideshow/advancing-drug-discovery-and-gaining-competitive-advantage-through-user-experience-ux/97414363 wpmjchammay2018-slideshare-180517165741
In this talk you will: - Hear about the internal UX design capabilities of nine global research-based biopharmaceutical companies from a new investigation carried out in 2017 - Find out how your organisation can benefit from a free UX toolkit for life science R&D designed by the Pistoia Alliance User Experience for Life Sciences (UXLS) initiative, a feat which involved over 50 UX design experts from 20 life science and tech organisations - Discover how UX offers a clear path to differentiating your business and reaping benefits for the discovery pipeline through specific case studies of UX in R&D Speaker Bio: Jennifer Cham, Lead User Experience Designer, EMBL-EBI Jenny Cham is a proteomics scientist turned User Experience Designer, who founded the UX design capability at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) in 2009. She has over ten years experience of delivering digital solutions specifically for complex data-driven biomedical research. Alongside her day job, is involved in the User Experience for Life Science project coordinated by the Pistoia Alliance. As a UX and digital design evangelist, Jenny writes articles and blogs about UX design for science. Her passion for game-storming-style workshops, design studios and graphic recording (aka sketchnoting) have all contributed to increasing stakeholder and user engagement in the design process, and build a community of UX early adopters in the pharmaceutical industry. ]]>

In this talk you will: - Hear about the internal UX design capabilities of nine global research-based biopharmaceutical companies from a new investigation carried out in 2017 - Find out how your organisation can benefit from a free UX toolkit for life science R&D designed by the Pistoia Alliance User Experience for Life Sciences (UXLS) initiative, a feat which involved over 50 UX design experts from 20 life science and tech organisations - Discover how UX offers a clear path to differentiating your business and reaping benefits for the discovery pipeline through specific case studies of UX in R&D Speaker Bio: Jennifer Cham, Lead User Experience Designer, EMBL-EBI Jenny Cham is a proteomics scientist turned User Experience Designer, who founded the UX design capability at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) in 2009. She has over ten years experience of delivering digital solutions specifically for complex data-driven biomedical research. Alongside her day job, is involved in the User Experience for Life Science project coordinated by the Pistoia Alliance. As a UX and digital design evangelist, Jenny writes articles and blogs about UX design for science. Her passion for game-storming-style workshops, design studios and graphic recording (aka sketchnoting) have all contributed to increasing stakeholder and user engagement in the design process, and build a community of UX early adopters in the pharmaceutical industry. ]]>
Thu, 17 May 2018 16:57:41 GMT /slideshow/advancing-drug-discovery-and-gaining-competitive-advantage-through-user-experience-ux/97414363 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) Advancing drug discovery and gaining competitive advantage through user experience (UX) JenniferCham In this talk you will: - Hear about the internal UX design capabilities of nine global research-based biopharmaceutical companies from a new investigation carried out in 2017 - Find out how your organisation can benefit from a free UX toolkit for life science R&D designed by the Pistoia Alliance User Experience for Life Sciences (UXLS) initiative, a feat which involved over 50 UX design experts from 20 life science and tech organisations - Discover how UX offers a clear path to differentiating your business and reaping benefits for the discovery pipeline through specific case studies of UX in R&D Speaker Bio: Jennifer Cham, Lead User Experience Designer, EMBL-EBI Jenny Cham is a proteomics scientist turned User Experience Designer, who founded the UX design capability at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) in 2009. She has over ten years experience of delivering digital solutions specifically for complex data-driven biomedical research. Alongside her day job, is involved in the User Experience for Life Science project coordinated by the Pistoia Alliance. As a UX and digital design evangelist, Jenny writes articles and blogs about UX design for science. Her passion for game-storming-style workshops, design studios and graphic recording (aka sketchnoting) have all contributed to increasing stakeholder and user engagement in the design process, and build a community of UX early adopters in the pharmaceutical industry. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/wpmjchammay2018-slideshare-180517165741-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In this talk you will: - Hear about the internal UX design capabilities of nine global research-based biopharmaceutical companies from a new investigation carried out in 2017 - Find out how your organisation can benefit from a free UX toolkit for life science R&amp;D designed by the Pistoia Alliance User Experience for Life Sciences (UXLS) initiative, a feat which involved over 50 UX design experts from 20 life science and tech organisations - Discover how UX offers a clear path to differentiating your business and reaping benefits for the discovery pipeline through specific case studies of UX in R&amp;D Speaker Bio: Jennifer Cham, Lead User Experience Designer, EMBL-EBI Jenny Cham is a proteomics scientist turned User Experience Designer, who founded the UX design capability at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) in 2009. She has over ten years experience of delivering digital solutions specifically for complex data-driven biomedical research. Alongside her day job, is involved in the User Experience for Life Science project coordinated by the Pistoia Alliance. As a UX and digital design evangelist, Jenny writes articles and blogs about UX design for science. Her passion for game-storming-style workshops, design studios and graphic recording (aka sketchnoting) have all contributed to increasing stakeholder and user engagement in the design process, and build a community of UX early adopters in the pharmaceutical industry.
Advancing drug discovery and gaining competitive advantage through user experience (UX) from Jennifer Cham
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Tips for Workshop Facilitation /slideshow/tips-for-workshop-facilitation/67678097 facilitationtipsjcham-161026143213
Some thoughts on how to be a successful workshop facilitator]]>

Some thoughts on how to be a successful workshop facilitator]]>
Wed, 26 Oct 2016 14:32:12 GMT /slideshow/tips-for-workshop-facilitation/67678097 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) Tips for Workshop Facilitation JenniferCham Some thoughts on how to be a successful workshop facilitator <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/facilitationtipsjcham-161026143213-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Some thoughts on how to be a successful workshop facilitator
Tips for Workshop Facilitation from Jennifer Cham
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How to run 1-to-1 usability testing (with life scientists) /slideshow/how-to-run-1to1-usability-testing-with-life-scientists/64519751 usabilitytestingemblebijcham2011-160729164856
Some tips on how to run 1-2-1 usability testing with your users/customers. If you are interested in testing in life science environments, this talk is for you! The example used is for a product I tested for molecular biologists whilst at EMBL-EBI in 2010/2011.]]>

Some tips on how to run 1-2-1 usability testing with your users/customers. If you are interested in testing in life science environments, this talk is for you! The example used is for a product I tested for molecular biologists whilst at EMBL-EBI in 2010/2011.]]>
Fri, 29 Jul 2016 16:48:56 GMT /slideshow/how-to-run-1to1-usability-testing-with-life-scientists/64519751 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) How to run 1-to-1 usability testing (with life scientists) JenniferCham Some tips on how to run 1-2-1 usability testing with your users/customers. If you are interested in testing in life science environments, this talk is for you! The example used is for a product I tested for molecular biologists whilst at EMBL-EBI in 2010/2011. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/usabilitytestingemblebijcham2011-160729164856-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Some tips on how to run 1-2-1 usability testing with your users/customers. If you are interested in testing in life science environments, this talk is for you! The example used is for a product I tested for molecular biologists whilst at EMBL-EBI in 2010/2011.
How to run 1-to-1 usability testing (with life scientists) from Jennifer Cham
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User Experience at the European Bioinformatics Institute /slideshow/user-experience-at-the-european-bioinformatics-institute/64476861 uxatebi2016slidesharesmall-160728134903
How we carry out user experience design at EMBL-EBI, to deliver easy-to-use services for life science researchers.]]>

How we carry out user experience design at EMBL-EBI, to deliver easy-to-use services for life science researchers.]]>
Thu, 28 Jul 2016 13:49:03 GMT /slideshow/user-experience-at-the-european-bioinformatics-institute/64476861 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) User Experience at the European Bioinformatics Institute JenniferCham How we carry out user experience design at EMBL-EBI, to deliver easy-to-use services for life science researchers. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/uxatebi2016slidesharesmall-160728134903-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> How we carry out user experience design at EMBL-EBI, to deliver easy-to-use services for life science researchers.
User Experience at the European Bioinformatics Institute from Jennifer Cham
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A UX Journey into the World of Early Drug Discovery /slideshow/a-ux-journey-into-the-world-of-early-drug-discovery/49412028 uxscot2015slidesnkjc-150615151510-lva1-app6891
Developing new medicines is an extremely challenging process with more than 50% of new medicines failing in late-stage development where the cost is the greatest. One of the main reasons for attrition is insufficient knowledge about the nature of the gene or protein (target) involved in a disease. Scientists in pharmaceutical research and development use diverse data and software applications to aid decision-making for drug target identification and validation. We have been designing a new web portal to support researchers working within the pharmaceutical industry and academic organisations with the aim to make early drug target identification more efficient. We will report on how we applied a range of participatory design methods including interviews, observations, sketching workshops, paper prototyping and usability testing to understand how experts carry out the very early stages of drug discovery. We will discuss the challenges of working in this domain and the extent to which standard UX approaches helped us understand what matters for our potential users so we could design and deliver solutions within an Agile framework. We also mention when popular UX methods didn't work in this complex environment and how we addressed these issues. This work has been carried out via the Centre for Therapeutic Target Validation, a partnership between the European Bioinformatics Institute, the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and GlaxoSmithKline. See www.targetvalidation.org]]>

Developing new medicines is an extremely challenging process with more than 50% of new medicines failing in late-stage development where the cost is the greatest. One of the main reasons for attrition is insufficient knowledge about the nature of the gene or protein (target) involved in a disease. Scientists in pharmaceutical research and development use diverse data and software applications to aid decision-making for drug target identification and validation. We have been designing a new web portal to support researchers working within the pharmaceutical industry and academic organisations with the aim to make early drug target identification more efficient. We will report on how we applied a range of participatory design methods including interviews, observations, sketching workshops, paper prototyping and usability testing to understand how experts carry out the very early stages of drug discovery. We will discuss the challenges of working in this domain and the extent to which standard UX approaches helped us understand what matters for our potential users so we could design and deliver solutions within an Agile framework. We also mention when popular UX methods didn't work in this complex environment and how we addressed these issues. This work has been carried out via the Centre for Therapeutic Target Validation, a partnership between the European Bioinformatics Institute, the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and GlaxoSmithKline. See www.targetvalidation.org]]>
Mon, 15 Jun 2015 15:15:10 GMT /slideshow/a-ux-journey-into-the-world-of-early-drug-discovery/49412028 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) A UX Journey into the World of Early Drug Discovery JenniferCham Developing new medicines is an extremely challenging process with more than 50% of new medicines failing in late-stage development where the cost is the greatest. One of the main reasons for attrition is insufficient knowledge about the nature of the gene or protein (target) involved in a disease. Scientists in pharmaceutical research and development use diverse data and software applications to aid decision-making for drug target identification and validation. We have been designing a new web portal to support researchers working within the pharmaceutical industry and academic organisations with the aim to make early drug target identification more efficient. We will report on how we applied a range of participatory design methods including interviews, observations, sketching workshops, paper prototyping and usability testing to understand how experts carry out the very early stages of drug discovery. We will discuss the challenges of working in this domain and the extent to which standard UX approaches helped us understand what matters for our potential users so we could design and deliver solutions within an Agile framework. We also mention when popular UX methods didn't work in this complex environment and how we addressed these issues. This work has been carried out via the Centre for Therapeutic Target Validation, a partnership between the European Bioinformatics Institute, the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and GlaxoSmithKline. See www.targetvalidation.org <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/uxscot2015slidesnkjc-150615151510-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Developing new medicines is an extremely challenging process with more than 50% of new medicines failing in late-stage development where the cost is the greatest. One of the main reasons for attrition is insufficient knowledge about the nature of the gene or protein (target) involved in a disease. Scientists in pharmaceutical research and development use diverse data and software applications to aid decision-making for drug target identification and validation. We have been designing a new web portal to support researchers working within the pharmaceutical industry and academic organisations with the aim to make early drug target identification more efficient. We will report on how we applied a range of participatory design methods including interviews, observations, sketching workshops, paper prototyping and usability testing to understand how experts carry out the very early stages of drug discovery. We will discuss the challenges of working in this domain and the extent to which standard UX approaches helped us understand what matters for our potential users so we could design and deliver solutions within an Agile framework. We also mention when popular UX methods didn&#39;t work in this complex environment and how we addressed these issues. This work has been carried out via the Centre for Therapeutic Target Validation, a partnership between the European Bioinformatics Institute, the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and GlaxoSmithKline. See www.targetvalidation.org
A UX Journey into the World of Early Drug Discovery from Jennifer Cham
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Are we burying our heads in the sand? Exploring issues around intellectual property rights in UX /slideshow/thinktank-slideshare-small/39748606 thinktankslidesharesmall-141001071742-phpapp01
The threat of patent infringement to businesses is perhaps better known in industries such as pharmaceuticals, engineering and manufacturing. However, in the User Experience (UX) field there are potential issues around patent infringement that, as practitioners, we need to be aware of. This session (originally a discussion held at UX Cambridge 2014) aimed to increase awareness and start a discussion amongst UX professionals regarding intellectual property issues that may impact our work. The session was an open discussion, where participants shared their experiences and concerns and posed questions for further exploration. The outcome was a sketchnote (https://www.flickr.com/photos/97823772@N02/15058945187/in/set-72157647610886191) which summarised the discussion. This was created by Chris Spalton, https://twitter.com/ChrisSpalton) [Please note: we are not intellectual property legal experts. Examples are from our own experience in this area, and secondary research sources. The main aim was to start a conversation and to identify the gaps in our knowledge in this potentially important area.]]]>

The threat of patent infringement to businesses is perhaps better known in industries such as pharmaceuticals, engineering and manufacturing. However, in the User Experience (UX) field there are potential issues around patent infringement that, as practitioners, we need to be aware of. This session (originally a discussion held at UX Cambridge 2014) aimed to increase awareness and start a discussion amongst UX professionals regarding intellectual property issues that may impact our work. The session was an open discussion, where participants shared their experiences and concerns and posed questions for further exploration. The outcome was a sketchnote (https://www.flickr.com/photos/97823772@N02/15058945187/in/set-72157647610886191) which summarised the discussion. This was created by Chris Spalton, https://twitter.com/ChrisSpalton) [Please note: we are not intellectual property legal experts. Examples are from our own experience in this area, and secondary research sources. The main aim was to start a conversation and to identify the gaps in our knowledge in this potentially important area.]]]>
Wed, 01 Oct 2014 07:17:42 GMT /slideshow/thinktank-slideshare-small/39748606 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) Are we burying our heads in the sand? Exploring issues around intellectual property rights in UX JenniferCham The threat of patent infringement to businesses is perhaps better known in industries such as pharmaceuticals, engineering and manufacturing. However, in the User Experience (UX) field there are potential issues around patent infringement that, as practitioners, we need to be aware of. This session (originally a discussion held at UX Cambridge 2014) aimed to increase awareness and start a discussion amongst UX professionals regarding intellectual property issues that may impact our work. The session was an open discussion, where participants shared their experiences and concerns and posed questions for further exploration. The outcome was a sketchnote (https://www.flickr.com/photos/97823772@N02/15058945187/in/set-72157647610886191) which summarised the discussion. This was created by Chris Spalton, https://twitter.com/ChrisSpalton) [Please note: we are not intellectual property legal experts. Examples are from our own experience in this area, and secondary research sources. The main aim was to start a conversation and to identify the gaps in our knowledge in this potentially important area.] <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/thinktankslidesharesmall-141001071742-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The threat of patent infringement to businesses is perhaps better known in industries such as pharmaceuticals, engineering and manufacturing. However, in the User Experience (UX) field there are potential issues around patent infringement that, as practitioners, we need to be aware of. This session (originally a discussion held at UX Cambridge 2014) aimed to increase awareness and start a discussion amongst UX professionals regarding intellectual property issues that may impact our work. The session was an open discussion, where participants shared their experiences and concerns and posed questions for further exploration. The outcome was a sketchnote (https://www.flickr.com/photos/97823772@N02/15058945187/in/set-72157647610886191) which summarised the discussion. This was created by Chris Spalton, https://twitter.com/ChrisSpalton) [Please note: we are not intellectual property legal experts. Examples are from our own experience in this area, and secondary research sources. The main aim was to start a conversation and to identify the gaps in our knowledge in this potentially important area.]
Are we burying our heads in the sand? Exploring issues around intellectual property rights in UX from Jennifer Cham
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Designing with the user in mind: 鐃how user-centred design (UCD) can work for bioinformatics /slideshow/bioinformatics-ucd-talkslideshare/28237133 bioinformaticsucdtalkslideshare-131114052526-phpapp01
Free talk video (you just need to get the access code by email) is here: https://www.iscb.org/cms_addon/multimedia/flvmedia.php?i=1377 Presented at ISMB ECCB 2013 conference: http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 It is recognised that bioinformatics resources often suffer from usability problems: for example, they can be too complex for the infrequent user to navigate, and they can lack sophistication compared to other websites that people use in their daily lives. In this presentation, Dr. Jenny Cham, User-Experience Analyst at the European Bioinformatics Institute, UK, will describe specific case studies to show how user-centred design (UCD) principles can be applied to bioinformatics services. As well as improved usability, the benefits of UCD can include more effective decision-making for design ideas and technologies during development; enhanced team-working and communication; cost effectiveness; and ultimately a bioinformatics service that more closely meets the needs of its target research community.]]>

Free talk video (you just need to get the access code by email) is here: https://www.iscb.org/cms_addon/multimedia/flvmedia.php?i=1377 Presented at ISMB ECCB 2013 conference: http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 It is recognised that bioinformatics resources often suffer from usability problems: for example, they can be too complex for the infrequent user to navigate, and they can lack sophistication compared to other websites that people use in their daily lives. In this presentation, Dr. Jenny Cham, User-Experience Analyst at the European Bioinformatics Institute, UK, will describe specific case studies to show how user-centred design (UCD) principles can be applied to bioinformatics services. As well as improved usability, the benefits of UCD can include more effective decision-making for design ideas and technologies during development; enhanced team-working and communication; cost effectiveness; and ultimately a bioinformatics service that more closely meets the needs of its target research community.]]>
Thu, 14 Nov 2013 05:25:26 GMT /slideshow/bioinformatics-ucd-talkslideshare/28237133 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) Designing with the user in mind: 鐃how user-centred design (UCD) can work for bioinformatics JenniferCham Free talk video (you just need to get the access code by email) is here: https://www.iscb.org/cms_addon/multimedia/flvmedia.php?i=1377 Presented at ISMB ECCB 2013 conference: http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 It is recognised that bioinformatics resources often suffer from usability problems: for example, they can be too complex for the infrequent user to navigate, and they can lack sophistication compared to other websites that people use in their daily lives. In this presentation, Dr. Jenny Cham, User-Experience Analyst at the European Bioinformatics Institute, UK, will describe specific case studies to show how user-centred design (UCD) principles can be applied to bioinformatics services. As well as improved usability, the benefits of UCD can include more effective decision-making for design ideas and technologies during development; enhanced team-working and communication; cost effectiveness; and ultimately a bioinformatics service that more closely meets the needs of its target research community. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/bioinformaticsucdtalkslideshare-131114052526-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Free talk video (you just need to get the access code by email) is here: https://www.iscb.org/cms_addon/multimedia/flvmedia.php?i=1377 Presented at ISMB ECCB 2013 conference: http://www.iscb.org/ismbeccb2013 It is recognised that bioinformatics resources often suffer from usability problems: for example, they can be too complex for the infrequent user to navigate, and they can lack sophistication compared to other websites that people use in their daily lives. In this presentation, Dr. Jenny Cham, User-Experience Analyst at the European Bioinformatics Institute, UK, will describe specific case studies to show how user-centred design (UCD) principles can be applied to bioinformatics services. As well as improved usability, the benefits of UCD can include more effective decision-making for design ideas and technologies during development; enhanced team-working and communication; cost effectiveness; and ultimately a bioinformatics service that more closely meets the needs of its target research community.
Designing with the user in mind: how user-centred design (UCD) can work for bioinformatics from Jennifer Cham
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A Survival Guide for Complex UX /slideshow/a-survival-guide-for-complex-ux/26018302 slidescomplexuxv12-130909053517-
Tutorial: As a UX practitioner working in complex environments you have to be flexible, since commonly-used user-centred design techniques may not work. In this tutorial, we provide insights into how you can approach UX problems in complex fields with confidence. With concrete examples from our experience of designing services for life scientists, we describe approaches you can use to characterise specialist users, and translate their requirements into successful designs. In the hands-on activity, you will experiment with our unique (and recently published) canvas sort technique, for prioritising large numbers of data items and modelling their interactions. So if you work in UX in a complex environment - such as in scientific research, pharmaceuticals, engineering, technology, finance, or others - join us to learn how to survive when things get complicated!]]>

Tutorial: As a UX practitioner working in complex environments you have to be flexible, since commonly-used user-centred design techniques may not work. In this tutorial, we provide insights into how you can approach UX problems in complex fields with confidence. With concrete examples from our experience of designing services for life scientists, we describe approaches you can use to characterise specialist users, and translate their requirements into successful designs. In the hands-on activity, you will experiment with our unique (and recently published) canvas sort technique, for prioritising large numbers of data items and modelling their interactions. So if you work in UX in a complex environment - such as in scientific research, pharmaceuticals, engineering, technology, finance, or others - join us to learn how to survive when things get complicated!]]>
Mon, 09 Sep 2013 05:35:16 GMT /slideshow/a-survival-guide-for-complex-ux/26018302 JenniferCham@slideshare.net(JenniferCham) A Survival Guide for Complex UX JenniferCham Tutorial: As a UX practitioner working in complex environments you have to be flexible, since commonly-used user-centred design techniques may not work. In this tutorial, we provide insights into how you can approach UX problems in complex fields with confidence. With concrete examples from our experience of designing services for life scientists, we describe approaches you can use to characterise specialist users, and translate their requirements into successful designs. In the hands-on activity, you will experiment with our unique (and recently published) canvas sort technique, for prioritising large numbers of data items and modelling their interactions. So if you work in UX in a complex environment - such as in scientific research, pharmaceuticals, engineering, technology, finance, or others - join us to learn how to survive when things get complicated! <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/slidescomplexuxv12-130909053517--thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Tutorial: As a UX practitioner working in complex environments you have to be flexible, since commonly-used user-centred design techniques may not work. In this tutorial, we provide insights into how you can approach UX problems in complex fields with confidence. With concrete examples from our experience of designing services for life scientists, we describe approaches you can use to characterise specialist users, and translate their requirements into successful designs. In the hands-on activity, you will experiment with our unique (and recently published) canvas sort technique, for prioritising large numbers of data items and modelling their interactions. So if you work in UX in a complex environment - such as in scientific research, pharmaceuticals, engineering, technology, finance, or others - join us to learn how to survive when things get complicated!
A Survival Guide for Complex UX from Jennifer Cham
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