Summary of user research #2908
calvin-lau-sig7
started this conversation in
Exit this page
Replies: 0 comments
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
-
A collaborative team from the Ministry of Justice, Department of Work and Pensions and the Scottish government proposed the component after having worked on components in their own services. This slide shows analysis of use of the Hide this Page button on the MoJ claim legal aid service during lockdown.
The Design System team agreed with the component’s proposers that there should be a consistency of approach in design and functionality across Government.
Research within the context of trauma and crisis
Researching with people who have or are experiencing trauma needs careful planning. We have a duty of care to our participants and were mindful to avoid extractive research or re-traumatising those who had given their time to us. Collaborating with Hyndburn and Ribble Valley (HARV) Move On Team in Accrington was essential in enabling us to do this. We built a dummy service based on the ‘check eligibility for child maintenance’ service and tested the component in that service with people with a lived experience of domestic abuse. We repeated the same tests with people with accessibility needs.
What we tested
This is journey map of what we tested:
Findings from people with a lived experience of domestic abuse
We found that users did:
Users did not:
Findings from people with accessibility needs.
We found that among test participants with accessibility needs:
Findings common to both groups
We found that users:
Testing of the Exit this page keyboard shortcut
Using the escape key as a keyboard shortcut was found to be problematic. In some situations, other functions of the Esc key would take precedence over the Exit this Page functionality.
For example, it would first close any popovers, dialog windows, or exit out of full screen mode before it would activate EtP, requiring a user to potentially have to wait or press Esc even more times before they could actually exit the page.
Pressing the Esc key also isn't counted as being an intentional user interaction (versus clicking the mouse or pressing other keys), which made the browser behave differently depending on if the user had only pressed Esc, or had done other things before pressing Esc—which is weird and inconsistent. because of how ESCAPE is interpreted by HTML and the way it functions in some browsers.
So… SHIFT press three times was decided on as a compromise.
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions