Evaluating the Intelligibility of Diagrammatic Languages Used in the Specification of Software
C. Britton, S. Jones, M. Kutar, M. Loomes, und B. Robinson. First International Conference on Theory and Application of Diagrams, Seite 376--391. Edinburgh, Scotland, UK, Springer Berlin, (September 2000)
Zusammenfassung
This paper presents an approach to evaluating the intelligibility of diagrammatic languages used in the specification of software. Research suggests that specification languages can be assessed in terms of properties that influence the intelligibility of representations produced using the languages. The paper describes the properties identified and highlights three in particular that have been shown to influence the intelligibility of representations: motivation of symbols in the language; the extent to which the language allows exploitation of human visual perception; and the amount of structure inherent in the language. The paper argues that the first two of these properties are not present to any great extent in diagrammatic languages used in software specification. In order to enhance the intelligibility of software specifications, we suggest that more attention should be paid to ways in which these languages can exploit the amount of structure inherent in the language.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 britton00
%A Britton, Carol
%A Jones, Sara
%A Kutar, Maria
%A Loomes, Martin
%A Robinson, Brian
%B First International Conference on Theory and Application of Diagrams
%C Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
%D 2000
%E Anderson, M.
%E Cheng, P.
%E Haarslev, V.
%I Springer Berlin
%K model comprehension
%P 376--391
%T Evaluating the Intelligibility of Diagrammatic Languages Used in the Specification of Software
%U http://www.springerlink.com/(jibswuvlhqn2cw30adrihg45)/app/home/contribution.asp?referrer=parent&backto=issue,32,46;journal,1993,3334;linkingpublicationresults,1:105633,1
%X This paper presents an approach to evaluating the intelligibility of diagrammatic languages used in the specification of software. Research suggests that specification languages can be assessed in terms of properties that influence the intelligibility of representations produced using the languages. The paper describes the properties identified and highlights three in particular that have been shown to influence the intelligibility of representations: motivation of symbols in the language; the extent to which the language allows exploitation of human visual perception; and the amount of structure inherent in the language. The paper argues that the first two of these properties are not present to any great extent in diagrammatic languages used in software specification. In order to enhance the intelligibility of software specifications, we suggest that more attention should be paid to ways in which these languages can exploit the amount of structure inherent in the language.
@inproceedings{britton00,
abstract = {This paper presents an approach to evaluating the intelligibility of diagrammatic languages used in the specification of software. Research suggests that specification languages can be assessed in terms of properties that influence the intelligibility of representations produced using the languages. The paper describes the properties identified and highlights three in particular that have been shown to influence the intelligibility of representations: motivation of symbols in the language; the extent to which the language allows exploitation of human visual perception; and the amount of structure inherent in the language. The paper argues that the first two of these properties are not present to any great extent in diagrammatic languages used in software specification. In order to enhance the intelligibility of software specifications, we suggest that more attention should be paid to ways in which these languages can exploit the amount of structure inherent in the language.},
added-at = {2006-03-24T16:34:33.000+0100},
address = {Edinburgh, Scotland, UK},
author = {Britton, Carol and Jones, Sara and Kutar, Maria and Loomes, Martin and Robinson, Brian},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2d52b6dde209f6206ec3bfd1acb2bb473/neilernst},
booktitle = {First International Conference on Theory and Application of Diagrams},
citeulike-article-id = {555095},
description = {sdasda},
editor = {Anderson, M. and Cheng, P. and Haarslev, V.},
howpublished = {LNCS 1889},
interhash = {4a84fdbab43c04fa8d45727c51a049c3},
intrahash = {d52b6dde209f6206ec3bfd1acb2bb473},
keywords = {model comprehension},
month = {September},
pages = {376--391},
priority = {4},
publisher = {Springer Berlin},
timestamp = {2006-03-24T16:34:33.000+0100},
title = {Evaluating the Intelligibility of Diagrammatic Languages Used in the Specification of Software},
url = {http://www.springerlink.com/(jibswuvlhqn2cw30adrihg45)/app/home/contribution.asp?referrer=parent\&backto=issue,32,46;journal,1993,3334;linkingpublicationresults,1:105633,1},
year = 2000
}