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Andy Dingley (talk | contribs) re-cat. This is a design technique, not punch card storage! |
Andy Dingley (talk | contribs) m couple of extra refs to clear the tags |
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'''Card sorting''' is a suite of techniques used to determine simultaneously, for a set of items, an ensemble of categories that group the items, and also an appropriate set of inclusion relationships among the categories.
A card sort treats the names of the items as given. In an ''open card sort'', the participants who do the sorting are expected to provide their own names for the categories. In a ''closed card sort'', the participants are provided with a predetermined set of category names.
A card sort is commonly undertaken when designing a navigation structure for an environment that offers an interesting variety of content and functionality, such as a web site.<ref name="Nielsen" >[http://www.useit.com/alertbox/20040719.html Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox, July 19, 2004]</ref>
|title=Card Sorting for Web Design
by Donna Maurer and Todd Warfel]</ref> In that context, the items to be organized are those that are significant in the environment. The way that the items are organized should make sense to the target audience and cannot be determined from first principles.▼
|url=http://groups.google.co.uk/group/uk.net.web.authoring/msg/b71d97aac76222d9
|newsgroup=uk.net.web.authoring
|date=[[April 29]], [[2008]]
}}</ref><ref name="Syntagm" >{{cite web
|title=Design for Usability - Card Sorting
|url=http://www.syntagm.co.uk/design/cardsort.shtml
|publisher=[http://www.syntagm.co.uk Syntagm Ltd.]
▲
The field of [[information architecture]] is founded upon the study of the structure of information. If an accepted and standardized taxonomy exists for a subject, it would be natural to simply apply that taxonomy as a means of organizing both the information in the environment and any navigation to particular subjects or functions.
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[[Category:
[[Category:Usability]]
[[Category:Human-computer interaction]]
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