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Human Factors for Technical Communicators (Wiley Technical Communication Library)
 
 
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Human Factors for Technical Communicators (Wiley Technical Communication Library) [Paperback]

Marlana Coe
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Product details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons (29 April 1996)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0471035300
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471035305
  • Product Dimensions: 19.1 x 2.1 x 23.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 560,679 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Marlana Coe
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Product Description

Product Description

A crash course in human factors theory and practice for technical communicators

If you′re a technical writer, technical editor, documentation manager, user–interface designer, usability tester, or any other type of technical communication professional, you′ve probably found yourself becoming more and more involved in the development, design, and testing of technical communication products. In order to handle your expanded responsibilities effectively you need a solid grounding in human factors, the art and science of designing for people. And now this book gives it to you––fast.

First, expert Marlana Coe takes you on a fascinating tour of the burgeoning science of human factors. In terms that you can understand, she explains all about the psychology and physiology of how users access, learn, and remember information; the impact of colors, shapes, and patterns; learning styles; approaches and obstacles to problem solving; action structures; and more. And, with the help of real–life examples of various technical communication products, she vividly demonstrates what works, what doesn′t, and why.

Then, she shows you how to apply what you′ve learned to create the best technical communication products possible. You′ll find out how to:
∗ Analyze users′ needs and learning styles
∗ Get and interpret user feedback and create partnerships with users
∗ Select the most effective layouts, colors, fonts, and graphics
∗ Build better navigational infrastructures
∗ Develop content that gives users everything they need to quickly identify and resolve problems
∗ Test and improve your product′s usability

From the Back Cover

A crash course in human factors theory and practice for technical communicators

If you′re a technical writer, technical editor, documentation manager, user–interface designer, usability tester, or any other type of technical communication professional, you′ve probably found yourself becoming more and more involved in the development, design, and testing of technical communication products. In order to handle your expanded responsibilities effectively you need a solid grounding in human factors, the art and science of designing for people. And now this book gives it to you—fast.

First, expert Marlana Coe takes you on a fascinating tour of the burgeoning science of human factors. In terms that you can understand, she explains all about the psychology and physiology of how users access, learn, and remember information; the impact of colors, shapes, and patterns; learning styles; approaches and obstacles to problem solving; action structures; and more. And, with the help of real–life examples of various technical communication products, she vividly demonstrates what works, what doesn′t, and why.

Then, she shows you how to apply what you′ve learned to create the best technical communication products possible. You′ll find out how to:

  • Analyze users′ needs and learning styles
  • Get and interpret user feedback and create partnerships with users
  • Select the most effective layouts, colors, fonts, and graphics
  • Build better navigational infrastructures
  • Develop content that gives users everything they need to quickly identify and resolve problems
  • Test and improve your product′s usability

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Sensation and perception are two ends of a continuum we use to take in sensory data, then interpret, store, retrieve, and apply it at will. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
This book is part of the Wiley Technical Communication Library, a handy range of books aimed specifically at technical communicators that recognises the broad range of disciplines in which practitioners need a grounding. In this case, we are looking at aspects of usability.

Human Factors is an easy read, perhaps if anything not delving deep enough into its subject. However, the information is well presented and gives a good general overview of the topic. There are twelve chapters, stretching from perception and learning theory to choosing a medium and defining a structure. There is overlap with other books on document design but the emphasis is slightly different here, coming always from the human perspective.

The early chapters concentrate on research findings about sensation, perception, learning, memory, problem solving techniques and how people access information. This all contributes to a sounder understanding of how readers perceive information presented to them and why they perceive it as they do.

The book then moves on to the practical ramifications this has on presenting information. It covers the creation of partnerships to involve users in information design and development, and design of the document itself (choice of medium, building a navigational infrastructure, deciding how to present the information and developing the content).

More than anything, this volume serves as an appetiser, encouraging the reader to find out more about the subject. Appendix B provides a list of human factors resources to facilitate this. An enjoyable book, leaving you wanting for more.

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Amazon.com:  6 reviews
51 of 53 people found the following review helpful
A must read for anyone that communicates online or on paper 18 Sep 2000
By atmj - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
If you do any kind of writing for your job buy this book and read it cover to cover. With that said my review follows:

There are so many positives in this book that I will list the negatives first, there are few and very minor at that.

The cover has got to go. It does not represent the depth and wealth of the information inside. To be honest, it looked so poorly thought out and old, I felt the contents of the book must be too. Thankfully, I dropped my bias and was very pleasantly surprized.

The other negative may be my own personal preference, but I like the footnote detail at the bottom of the page, so when I see it I don't have to scoot to the end of the chapter to see what it is. This is how good the book was, I read all the footnotes and references too.

Marlana Coe has created a book that I hope not only do Technical writers from all over read, but Human Factors professionals too. As a fanatic-pursuer of documentation meeting its goal to communicate, this book says it all. The usability measurement on documentation is whether or not it allows the author to communicate to the reader and Marlana Coe shows you just how to do that. In fact, she shows you while doing that herself.

I bought this book because as a Human Factors professional, I find we do not practice what we preach. We review a product and come up with wonderful ideas to make it better and then proceed to hide that in a document that is not geared for the reader. Many technical reports, even the ones that only have a small group of customers, don't meet those customers needs. There are no pictures, tables and diagrams and worst of all no logical organization for the reader to create a structure around the information. The documents are geared for the writer to regurgitate data, not for the reader to absorb it. Granted this is not all, but too much of a majority in a group of people that should know better. Most human factors professional know, how to increase usability of everyone else's product but their own: the technical report they create on products they review. This book bridges that gap, for HF professionals especially. Yes, I'm including myself in this category (I did buy the book after all).

For all the rest of you, this gives you reasons for all the practices that good technical writers should use. From the amount of white space to use to the number of fonts and colors. There are also suggestions on organization and on construction of these documents. One section discussed content and the importance of context of usage. This is something, I never really thought of that much. (Oops).

Another thing the author has done was fashion a book on a technical subject and made it readable. This is something she also covers in her book. Her language is natural and she has not fallen into the trap of using technical words or ones that may escape the average readers vocabulary.

In a word: Fantastic!

15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Fantastic book! 21 Jan 2003
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book is extremely well done, and it can be applied to much more than writing. I think that the bulk of it applies to almost any kind of design, i.e getting to know the users, their needs, abilities, experience, etc. and then involving them in the design, getting feedback, establishing a partnership, etc. It's just the kind of up from the trenches stuff that managers would be wise to listen to but very rarely do. You can definitely sense the frustration the author has in technical writers being the band-aid applied to poor product design and cost-cutting, and she offers concrete alternatives when you have limitations.

I also love the recursiveness of it, in that she is writing the same thing she is also describing, so talk about reading between the lines! I could read it over and over, each time appreciating more and more how she followed her own advice.

This book is what I always look for in a book, because it starts from the beginning and ends at the end, with a clear trail of how it got there. The supporting introduction, glossary, index, notes and references are very well done.

22 of 32 people found the following review helpful
Great insite into the Reader 3 April 2000
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Coe does a great job of introducing the reader to the writer. There are so many things that we as writers don't think about, or take for granted when we write. This book really opened my eyes not only as a writer but also as a reader to the importance of understanding how people read, understand, learn, and absorb information.
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