학술논문

Access to Legal Services: Organizing Better Self-help Systems
Document Type
Conference
Source
2007 IEEE International Professional Communication Conference Professional Communication Conference, 2007. IPCC 2007. IEEE International. :1-5 Oct, 2007
Subject
General Topics for Engineers
Law
Legal factors
Organizing
Usability
Information retrieval
Web page design
Navigation
System testing
Protocols
Cognitive science
Self-help Website
Information architecture
usable information systems
Language
ISSN
2158-091X
2158-1002
Abstract
The need for free, objective consumer legal information has increased since 2003. Legal services, such as the Illinois Technology for the Law and the Public Interest, address this need through online self-help services where users can access personalized legal aid. Usability is an important factor for such self-help Websites where users may have limited computer experience. This paper examines the usability of the National Public Automated Documents Website for seniors, novice computer users, and legal advocates. We briefly review current design for statewide Websites and then apply usability metrics to tasks of the information search and retrieval process. We report on users' interaction with features of the system related to navigation, process flow, user expectations, and the successful retrieval of legal documents during a session. The particular strength of the insights provided by this explorative usability test and talk aloud protocols is that they refer to both informational sites that users primarily browse and a process-dependent information retrieval system. From these preliminary insights, designers can produce sites that take into account user mental models that impact their overall satisfaction.