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Interaction Design and Agile Development: A Real-World Perspective (2007)
| Content Provider | CiteSeerX |
|---|---|
| Author | Ferreira, Jennifer |
| Abstract | Although both agile development methods and interaction design aim to build quality software that meets the user’s needs, each approaches development from a different perspective. Agile development methods describe activities addressing the coding (and in some cases the process management) part of software development, whereas interaction design methods describe activities for developing that aspect of the software that will be perceived by the user. Agile development and interaction design each have little to say about the other, despite the reality that both ap-proaches are combined in practice. There has been little investigation into how the two processes work together, and the issues that arise. To aim for a better understanding of practice, we conducted grounded theory re-search about real-world software teams who combine interaction design and agile development. The results provided insights into interaction de-sign being done up front (before implementation begins), the structure of |
| File Format | |
| Publisher Date | 2007-01-01 |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Subject Keyword | Grounded Theory Re-search Agile Development Method Describe Activity Real-world Software Team Process Management Different Perspective Implementation Begin Real-world Perspective Interaction De-sign Interaction Design Aim Interaction Design Agile Development Method User Need Software Development Quality Software Approach Development Little Investigation Agile Development |
| Content Type | Text |