Results 281 to 290 of about 140,432 (308)
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A User-Satisfaction Approach to IS Effectiveness Measurement
Journal of Information Technology, 1991This paper reports on research conducted by the authors into how to measure the effectiveness of a personal computer network used by a business school to deliver a range of personal productivity tools to MBA students, as well as academic and administrative staff.
Dan Remenyi, Arthur Money
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Information Systems Management, 1993
Senior executives have individualized needs. How well are their needs met by executive information systems (EISs) designed for their use? This survey of CEOs measures their satisfaction with EISs. The survey also tests what link, if any, exists between a high level of user satisfaction and certain design and implementation approaches—including ...
Roch Bénard, Ahmet Şatir
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Senior executives have individualized needs. How well are their needs met by executive information systems (EISs) designed for their use? This survey of CEOs measures their satisfaction with EISs. The survey also tests what link, if any, exists between a high level of user satisfaction and certain design and implementation approaches—including ...
Roch Bénard, Ahmet Şatir
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User's Satisfaction in Recommendation Systems
2014A significant response to the information overload problem currently being experienced as a result of the enormous advent of internet usage has been demonstrated by recommendation systems; that is, providing users with adapted information services. User preferences play a key role in preparing recommendations in the search for required information over
Shahid Kamal +2 more
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Interfaces, 1986
Bogon the gnome was obsessed with the measurement of user satisfaction. Together with his super-servant LISREL, he set out to test his questionnaire. And so began the greatest MIS experiment in history, one that would change the world, for Bogon’s measurements were more precise and more complete than any that had gone before.
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Bogon the gnome was obsessed with the measurement of user satisfaction. Together with his super-servant LISREL, he set out to test his questionnaire. And so began the greatest MIS experiment in history, one that would change the world, for Bogon’s measurements were more precise and more complete than any that had gone before.
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Behavioral Analysis for User Satisfaction
2022 IEEE Eighth International Conference on Multimedia Big Data (BigMM), 2022Michela Chimienti +5 more
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Proceedings of the 17th annual computer personnel research conference on -, 1980
No data processing system can be considered good in and of itself. The true test of the value of a system is whether or not its users are satisfied with it.It's quite possible to design and install a most comprehensive on-line data base system, and yet end up with a user who “can't live” with the terminal noise.
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No data processing system can be considered good in and of itself. The true test of the value of a system is whether or not its users are satisfied with it.It's quite possible to design and install a most comprehensive on-line data base system, and yet end up with a user who “can't live” with the terminal noise.
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Is user satisfaction a hobgoblin?
Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 1976AbstractThis paper is in response to William S. Cooper: “On Selecting a Measure of Retrieval Effectiveness.”Journal of the American Society for Information Science. 1973;24(2)87–100. Whereas Cooper considers (subjective) satisfaction of a user as the utility of an individual search (and then computes system utility as the average search utility), this
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1994
It is possible to measure various quantities about a user’s interaction with a system, such as frequencies of command usage, task completion times, and user think times (Treu, 1975a; Abrams and Treu, 1977). This was discussed in Chapter 5. Values of such measures can reflect the design complexity of interaction language and how well a language is known
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It is possible to measure various quantities about a user’s interaction with a system, such as frequencies of command usage, task completion times, and user think times (Treu, 1975a; Abrams and Treu, 1977). This was discussed in Chapter 5. Values of such measures can reflect the design complexity of interaction language and how well a language is known
openaire +1 more source

