2 neue Veröffentlichungen in den Conference Proceedings der Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS) 2019

Die folgenden Beiträge wurden auf der HICSS 2019 veröffentlicht:

Strohmann, T., Höper, L. und Robra-Bissantz, S. 2019. "Design Guidelines for Creating a Convincing User Experience with Virtual In-vehicle Assistants," Proceedings of the 52st Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS).

Abstract: This research provides guidelines for the representational and interaction design of virtual in-vehicle assistants. The guidelines offer a clearly structured overview about what designers have to consider while creating in-vehicle virtual assistants with a convincing user experience. The design guidelines are developed using the design science research paradigm. Based on assistant requirements for a great user experience derived from the previous research literature and the results of five expert interviews, concrete guidelines for the design of in-vehicle virtual assistants are developed. For evaluation, the guidelines are presented to another expert and then refined based on her feedback.



Werth, O., Guhr, N. und Breitner, M. H. 2019. "Successful Mobile Application Development: Towards a Taxonomy of Domain-Specific Process Models and Methodologies," Proceedings of the 52st Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS).

Abstract: Mobile applications and mobile application development issues receive an increasing attention for practitioners and academics. The development of mobile applications is connected with a number of domain-specific issues and challenges (e.g., fulfilment of customer requirements or the prevention of high development costs). Consequently, the decision of the most effective process model to develop a mobile application plays a crucial role for software and mobile application development teams. With the help of a structured taxonomy-building methodology, we contribute to the extant literature by creating and presenting a taxonomy for process models and methodologies in software engineering and the mobile application development domain. The taxonomy enrich the existing knowledge base and can help mobile application developers to choose the most suitable process model or methodology. Based on our examination, our results indicate new directions for mobile application research and implications for mobile application development.