Jeffrey A. Bacha

3 articles
Purdue University West Lafayette
  1. Mapping Use, Storytelling, and Experience Design
    Abstract

    Framed around three different antenarratives about system development, this article builds on established user-centered theories to present a mixed-method approach to user experience (UX) design. By combining network theory, storytelling, and process mapping, this article provides a practical method of including users’ experiences during the predevelopment stages of building workplace-specific digital technologies. Specifically, this article argues for the collection of user-generated antenarratives as the first step in UX product development and demonstrates how to use those experience-based stories.

    doi:10.1177/1050651917746708
  2. The Physical Mundane as Topos: Walking/Dwelling/Using as Rhetorical Invention
    Abstract

    Borrowing from rhetorically based theories of usability, this article offers an invention tactic designed to help students understand how mundane features of everyday dwelling places have significant impacts on their educational experiences. Additionally, the offered tactic helps students understand how to craft rhetorical critiques in contexts inside and outside academia.

    doi:10.58680/ccc201628881
  3. Taxonomies, Folksonomies, and Semantics: Establishing Functional Meaning in Navigational Structures
    Abstract

    This article argues for the establishment of a usability process that incorporates the study of “words” and “word phrases.” It demonstrates how semantically mapping a navigational taxonomy can help the developers of digital environments establish a more focused sense of functional meaning for the users of their digital designs.

    doi:10.2190/tw.42.3.d