EN ISO 14915-1:2002

Software ergonomics for multimedia user interfaces - Part 1: Design principles and framework (ISO 14915-1:2002) EN ISO 14915-1:2002

Publication date:   Oct 23, 2003

General information

90.93 Standard confirmed   Jun 10, 2008

CEN

CEN/TC 122 Ergonomics

European Norm

13.180   Ergonomics | 35.200   Interface and interconnection equipment

Buying

Published

Language in which you want to receive the document.

Scope

ISO 14915-1:2002 establishes design principles for multimedia user interfaces and provides a framework for handling the different considerations involved in their design. It addresses user interfaces for applications that incorporate, integrate and synchronize different media. This includes static media such as text, graphics or images, and dynamic media such as audio, animation, video or media related to other sensory modalities. Detailed design issues within a single medium (e.g. the graphical design of an animation sequence) are only addressed as far as they imply ergonomic consequences for the user.
ISO 14915-1:2002 gives requirements and recommendations for the ergonomic design of multimedia applications mainly intended for professional and vocational activities such as work or learning. It does not specifically address applications outside this area, such as entertainment, although some recommendations can also be applicable in such domains.
ISO 14915-1:2002 is applicable to software aspects related to multimedia user interfaces and does not address hardware or implementation issues. The ergonomic requirements and recommendations described in ISO 14915-1:2002 can be realized through very different techniques, e.g. the delivery system, a scripting language, or the application.
The focus of ISO 14915-1:2002 is on multimedia presentation issues. Multimodal input which uses different media such as speech in combination with pointing for entering information is not considered in the recommendations provided.

Life cycle

NOW

PUBLISHED
EN ISO 14915-1:2002
90.93 Standard confirmed
Jun 10, 2008