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1 | | Which of the following is not a task that will be carried out by a user of a system through its interface? |
| | A) | Issuing commands to the system to indicate what the user wants to do. |
| | B) | Responding to and correcting errors. |
| | C) | Storing data in a database. |
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2 | | Which of the following is not a metaphor for the way that users interact with the user interface? |
| | A) | Direct manipulation. |
| | B) | Scenario. |
| | C) | Dialogue. |
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3 | | Which kind of message is both an input message and an output message? |
| | A) | Prompt. |
| | B) | Data. |
| | C) | Help. |
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4 | | Which kind of message is provided by a system when it displays a request for the user to enter data? |
| | A) | Status. |
| | B) | Help. |
| | C) | Prompt. |
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5 | | Why is the design of direct manipulation GUI interfaces more complicated than text-based dialogues? |
| | A) | They are event-driven, and the user can create events, such as button clicks, in any order. |
| | B) | There is no way of representing GUI interfaces in UML. |
| | C) | They can only be implemented using Visual Basic or Java. |
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6 | | Which of the following is not a characteristic of good user-interface dialogues? |
| | A) | Appropriate user support. |
| | B) | Minimal user input. |
| | C) | Minimal feedback from the system. |
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7 | | A system provides hypertext help and tooltips, which display information about buttons in the toolbar when the mouse cursor moves over them. Which of the following characteristics of good dialogues is this an example of? |
| | A) | Appropriate user support. |
| | B) | Consistency. |
| | C) | Minimal user input. |
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8 | | Which of the following is an example of consistency? |
| | A) | All dialogue boxes have an ‘OK’ button and a ‘Cancel’ button centred at the bottom of the dialogue box. |
| | B) | When a shareware package starts, if it has not been licensed, the user has to click a button labelled ‘I agree’, which appears in different positions in the start-up dialogue box on different occasions. |
| | C) | When entering a value, the user can sometimes type it in and sometimes select it from a list |
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9 | | Which of the following is not an example of minimal user input? |
| | A) | The user can enter abbreviations. |
| | B) | The user has to re-enter values in full when he or she has made an error. |
| | C) | The user can use control key combinations as shortcuts to menu items. |
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10 | | Some organisations set standards for user interface design. What are these standards called? |
| | A) | Ethnographic standards |
| | B) | GUIdes (short for ‘GUI design’). |
| | C) | Style guides. |
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11 | | Which of the following is not a list of factors that affect the design of the user interface? |
| | A) | The nature of the task that the user is carrying out, the type of user, the amount of training the user will have undertaken, the frequency of use and the hardware and software architecture. |
| | B) | The nature of the task that the user is carrying out, the type of user, the amount of training the user will have undertaken, the frequency of use and the database architecture. |
| | C) | The nature of the task that the user is carrying out, the type of user, the choice of requirements gathering techniques, the frequency of use and the hardware and software architecture. |
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12 | | Which of the following is a list of approaches to user interface design? |
| | A) | Structured, ethnographic and scenario-based. |
| | B) | Consistent, adequate and minimal. |
| | C) | Requirements, design and evaluation. |
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13 | | Which of the following is not a characteristic of structured approaches to user-interface design? |
| | A) | They are based on a life cycle broken down into stages, steps and tasks. |
| | B) | They require the designer to participate in the day-to-day work of users. |
| | C) | They define specific techniques and lay down which techniques to use in each step or task. |
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14 | | Which of the following is not a characteristic of ethnographic approaches to user interface design? |
| | A) | They require the designer to participate in the day-to-day work of the users. |
| | B) | They use quantitative methods based on statistical analysis. |
| | C) | They recognise that different users have different subjective experiences of using systems. |
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15 | | Which of the following is used as a criticism of laboratory testing of user interface designs? |
| | A) | The tests lack ecological validity. |
| | B) | The tests take too long. |
| | C) | There is not evidence that the tests improve usability. |
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16 | | Which of the following is not a characteristic of scenario-based approaches to user interface design? |
| | A) | They use checklists, such as the contextual analysis questionnaire. |
| | B) | They use text or storyboards to describe interaction with the system step by step. |
| | C) | They can be used to visualise how users will interact with a new system. |
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17 | | Which kind of user interface design approach is closest to use case analysis? |
| | A) | Structured. |
| | B) | Ethnographic. |
| | C) | Scenario-based. |
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18 | | Which of the following is a list of criteria for measuring usability? |
| | A) | Learnability, efficiency, flexibility and reusability. |
| | B) | User-friendliness, throughput, consistency and attitude. |
| | C) | Learnability, throughput, flexibility and attitude. |
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19 | | Which of the following organizations has laid down standards for the ergonomics of visual display terminals? |
| | A) | International Standards Organization (ISO). |
| | B) | Object Management Group (OMG). |
| | C) | Unified Modelling Group (UMG). |
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20 | | Which of the following is not a requirement on employers under the UK’s Health and Safety Regulations for Display Screen Equipment? |
| | A) | The employer must analyse workstations to assess and reduce risks. |
| | B) | The employer must provide training on health and safety relevant to workstations. |
| | C) | The employer must monitor employees’ use of workstations electronically. |
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