EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017
(Main)Systems and software engineering - Systems and software product Quality Requirements and Evaluation (SQuaRE) - Common Industry Format (CIF) for usability: Context of use description (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
Systems and software engineering - Systems and software product Quality Requirements and Evaluation (SQuaRE) - Common Industry Format (CIF) for usability: Context of use description (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
ISO/IEC 25063:2014 describes the Common Industry Format (CIF) for context of use descriptions and specifies the contents of both high-level and detailed descriptions of the context of use for an existing, intended, implemented or deployed system. A context-of-use description includes information about the users and other stakeholder groups, the characteristics of each user group, the goals of the users, the tasks of the users, and the environment(s) in which the system is used.
The context of use description is applicable to software and hardware systems, products or services (excluding generic products, such as a display screen or keyboard). It is important to gather and analyse information on the current context in order to understand and then describe the context that will apply in the future system. The context of use description provides a collection of data relevant for analysis, specification, design and evaluation of an interactive system from the perspective of the various user groups and other stakeholders.
System- und Software-Engineering - Qualitätskriterien und Bewertung von Systemen und Softwareprodukten (SQuaRE) - Allgemeines Industrieformat (CIF) zur Gebrauchstauglichkeit: Nutzungskontextbeschreibung (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
Ingénierie des systèmes et du logiciel - Exigences de qualité et évaluation des systèmes et du logiciel (SQuaRE) - Format industriel commun (CIF) pour l'utilisabilité: Description du contexte d'utilisation (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
L'ISO/IEC 25063:2014 spécifie les contenus des descriptions - à la fois générales et détaillées - du contexte d'utilisation d'un système, produit ou service existant, conçu ou mis en ?uvre.
La description du contexte d'utilisation s'applique aux systèmes, produits ou services des logiciels et matériels (à l'exception des produits génériques, tels qu'un écran d'affichage ou clavier). La description du contexte d'utilisation est destinée à être utilisée dans le cadre de documents relatifs au niveau système, dérivés des processus de développement tels que ceux figurant dans l'ISO 9241‑210 et dans les normes de procédés/processus de l'ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 7.
L'ISO/IEC 25063:2014 n'impose aucun type de méthode, cycle de vie, ni procédé/processus.
L'élément d'information d'un contexte d'utilisation peut être intégré dans tous les types de modèles de processus.
NOTE Afin d'établir des modèles de processus, l'ISO/IEC/TR 24774[16] et l'ISO/IEC 15504‑2[9] spécifient respectivement les exigences de format et de conformité applicables aux modèles de procédés/processus. En outre, l'ISO/IEC 15289[8] définit les types et le contenu des éléments d'information élaborés et utilisés dans les modèles de processus dans le cadre de la gestion du cycle de vie du système et du logiciel. L'ISO/IEC 15504‑5[10] et l'ISO/IEC 15504‑6[11] définissent les produits fabriqués, y compris les éléments d'information, à des fins d'évaluation de la capacité des procédés (ou processus). Les modèles de processus et les éléments d'information associés à la conception centrée sur l'opérateur humain des systèmes interactifs sont contenus respectivement dans l'ISO/TR 18529[13] et dans l'ISO/TS 18152[12].
L'ISO/IEC 25063:2014 décrit également la finalité de l'utilisation des descriptions du contexte d'utilisation et identifie les utilisateurs cibles des descriptions du contexte d'utilisation.
Si l'ISO/IEC 25063:2014 spécifie les éléments de contenu nécessaires à un descriptif de contexte d'utilisation, elle n'impose cependant aucune structure ni présentation particulières concernant la documentation du contexte d'utilisation.
Sistemi in programska oprema - Zahteve za kakovost in vrednotenje sistemov in programske opreme (SQuaRE) - Skupni industrijski format (CIF) za uporabnost: kontekst opisa uporabe (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
Standard ISO/IEC 25063:2014 opisuje skupni industrijski format (CIF) za opise kontekstov uporabe ter določa visokonivojske in podrobne opise konteksta uporabe za obstoječi, predvideni ali uvedeni sistem oziroma sistem v uporabi. Opis konteksta uporabe vključuje informacije o uporabnikih in drugih skupinah interesnih strani, lastnostih posamezne skupine uporabnikov, ciljih uporabnikov, nalogah uporabnikov in okoljih, v katerih se sistem uporablja.
Opis konteksta uporabe se uporablja za sisteme programske in strojne opreme, izdelke ali storitve, vendar ne za izdelke za splošno uporabo, kot so zasloni ali tipkovnice. Za razumevanje in opis konteksta, ki se bo uporabljal v prihodnjem sistemu, je treba zbirati in analizirati informacije o trenutnem kontekstu. Opis konteksta uporabe podaja zbirko podatkov za analizo, specifikacijo, načrt in vrednotenje interaktivnega sistema z vidika različnih skupin uporabnikov in drugih interesnih strani.
General Information
Overview
EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017 (identical to ISO/IEC 25063:2014) defines the Common Industry Format (CIF) for context of use descriptions within the SQuaRE family. It specifies the content required for both high‑level and detailed descriptions of the context in which an interactive system, product or service is used. The standard is intended to document information about users, stakeholder groups, user characteristics, goals, tasks and environments to support analysis, specification, design and usability evaluation.
Key topics and requirements
- Scope of applicability: Applies to software and hardware systems, products or services (excluding generic devices such as a single display or keyboard). Covers existing, intended, designed, implemented or deployed systems.
- Types of descriptions: Defines both initial/high‑level outlines and detailed context‑of‑use descriptions appropriate at different lifecycle stages.
- Essential elements: Requires documentation of:
- Subject (the system/product/service under consideration)
- User population and stakeholder groups, including characteristics of each group
- User goals and responsibilities
- User tasks and task sequences
- Environment(s) of use (physical, social, technical)
- Problems and constraints observed or anticipated
- Purpose-driven content: Context descriptions are intended to support human‑centred design, usability testing, requirements definition, and evaluation - not to mandate specific methods, processes or life cycles.
- Conformance and integration: Content can be integrated into system life‑cycle documentation and process models; the standard defines what to include rather than how to run usability activities.
Applications and who uses it
- User experience (UX) designers and interaction designers - to ground design decisions in documented user context.
- Product managers and systems engineers - to align stakeholder needs, constraints and environments with system requirements.
- Usability evaluators and test teams - to define the context for formative and summative usability evaluations.
- Requirements engineers - as input to user needs reports and user requirements specifications.
- Regulatory and procurement teams - to provide consistent, auditable context descriptions for vendor assessments or compliance evidence.
Practical uses include producing the Context of Use input for user needs reports, creating test scenarios for usability evaluations, and ensuring consistent handover of usability information across design, development and validation stages.
Related standards
- Part of the SQuaRE series (ISO/IEC 25000–25099)
- CIF family: ISO/IEC 25064 (User needs report) and planned CIF documents (user requirements specification, evaluation reports, field data)
- Aligned with ISO 9241‑210 (human‑centred design) and lifecycle processes such as ISO/IEC 15288
Keywords: ISO/IEC 25063, EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017, context of use, CIF, usability, SQuaRE, user‑centred design, usability evaluation, user requirements.
Standards Content (Sample)
SLOVENSKI STANDARD
01-december-2017
Sistemi in programska oprema - Zahteve za kakovost in vrednotenje sistemov in
programske opreme (SQuaRE) - Skupni industrijski format (CIF) za uporabnost:
kontekst opisa uporabe (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
Systems and software engineering - Systems and software product Quality
Requirements and Evaluation (SQuaRE) - Common Industry Format (CIF) for usability:
Context of use description (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
System- und Software-Engineering - Qualitätskriterien und Bewertung von Systemen
und Softwareprodukten (SQuaRE) - Allgemeines Industrieformat (CIF) zur
Gebrauchstauglichkeit: Nutzungskontextbeschreibung (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
Ingénierie des systèmes et du logiciel - Exigences de qualité et évaluation des systèmes
et du logiciel (SQuaRE) - Format industriel commun (CIF) pour l'utilisabilité: Description
du contexte d'utilisation (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
Ta slovenski standard je istoveten z: EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017
ICS:
35.080 Programska oprema Software
2003-01.Slovenski inštitut za standardizacijo. Razmnoževanje celote ali delov tega standarda ni dovoljeno.
EN ISO/IEC 25063
EUROPEAN STANDARD
NORME EUROPÉENNE
May 2017
EUROPÄISCHE NORM
ICS 35.080
English Version
Systems and software engineering - Systems and software
product Quality Requirements and Evaluation (SQuaRE) -
Common Industry Format (CIF) for usability: Context of
use description (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
Ingénierie des systèmes et du logiciel - Exigences de System- und Software-Engineering - Qualitätskriterien
qualité et évaluation des systèmes et du logiciel und Bewertung von Systemen und Softwareprodukten
(SQuaRE) - Format industriel commun (CIF) pour (SQuaRE) - Allgemeines Industrieformat (CIF) zur
l'utilisabilité: Description du contexte d'utilisation Gebrauchstauglichkeit: Nutzungskontextbeschreibung
(ISO/IEC 25063:2014) (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)
This European Standard was approved by CEN on 6 April 2017.
CEN members are bound to comply with the CEN/CENELEC Internal Regulations which stipulate the conditions for giving this
European Standard the status of a national standard without any alteration. Up-to-date lists and bibliographical references
concerning such national standards may be obtained on application to the CEN-CENELEC Management Centre or to any CEN
member.
This European Standard exists in three official versions (English, French, German). A version in any other language made by
translation under the responsibility of a CEN member into its own language and notified to the CEN-CENELEC Management
Centre has the same status as the official versions.
CEN members are the national standards bodies of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia,
Finland, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania,
Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland,
Turkey and United Kingdom.
EUROPEAN COMMITTEE FOR STANDARDIZATION
COMITÉ EUROPÉEN DE NORMALISATION
EUROPÄISCHES KOMITEE FÜR NORMUNG
CEN-CENELEC Management Centre: Avenue Marnix 17, B-1000 Brussels
© 2017 CEN All rights of exploitation in any form and by any means reserved Ref. No. EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017 E
worldwide for CEN national Members.
Contents Page
European foreword . 3
European foreword
The text of ISO/IEC 25063:2014 has been prepared by Technical Committee ISO/IEC JTC 1 “Information
technology” of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International
Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and has been taken over as EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017 by Technical
Committee CEN/TC 122 “Ergonomics” the secretariat of which is held by DIN.
This European Standard shall be given the status of a national standard, either by publication of an
identical This European Standard shall be given the status of a national standard, either by publication
of an identical text or by endorsement, at the latest by November 2017, and conflicting national
standards shall be withdrawn at the latest by November 2017.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. CEN [and/or CENELEC] shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent
rights.
According to the CEN-CENELEC Internal Regulations, the national standards organizations of the
following countries are bound to implement this European Standard: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria,
Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia,
France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta,
Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland,
Turkey and the United Kingdom.
Endorsement notice
The text of ISO/IEC 25063:2014 has been approved by CEN as EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017 without any
modification.
INTERNATIONAL ISO/IEC
STANDARD 25063
First edition
2014-03-15
Systems and software engineering —
Systems and software product
Quality Requirements and Evaluation
(SQuaRE) — Common Industry Format
(CIF) for usability: Context of use
description
Ingénierie des systèmes et du logiciel — Exigences de qualité et
évaluation des systèmes et du logiciel (SQuaRE) — Format industriel
commun (CIF) pour l’utilisabilité: Description du contexte d’utilisation
Reference number
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
©
ISO/IEC 2014
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
© ISO/IEC 2014
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting on the internet or an intranet, without prior
written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address below or ISO’s member body in the country of
the requester.
ISO copyright office
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Tel. + 41 22 749 01 11
Fax + 41 22 749 09 47
E-mail copyright@iso.org
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Published in Switzerland
ii © ISO/IEC 2014 – All rights reserved
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
Contents Page
Foreword .iv
Introduction .v
1 Scope . 1
2 Conformance . 1
3 Terms and definitions . 1
4 Purposes and types of context of use descriptions . 4
4.1 General . 4
4.2 Initial outline of the context of use . 6
4.3 Detailed context of use descriptions . 6
4.4 Context of use for an evaluation . 7
4.5 Context of use information included in a product description. 7
5 Elements of a context of use description . 8
5.1 General . 8
5.2 Subject of the context of use description . 9
5.3 User population .10
5.4 Goals and responsibilities of the user group and the organization .13
5.5 Tasks of the users .14
5.6 Environment(s) of the user .16
5.7 Problems .18
Annex A (informative) Initial outline of the context of use .20
Annex B (informative) Users of the context of use .21
Annex C (informative) Example of a context of use checklist .23
Bibliography .32
© ISO/IEC 2014 – All rights reserved iii
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) and IEC (the International Electrotechnical
Commission) form the specialized system for worldwide standardization. National bodies that are
members of ISO or IEC participate in the development of International Standards through technical
committees established by the respective organization to deal with particular fields of technical
activity. ISO and IEC technical committees collaborate in fields of mutual interest. Other international
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO and IEC, also take part in the
work. In the field of information technology, ISO and IEC have established a joint technical committee,
ISO/IEC JTC 1.
International Standards are drafted in accordance with the rules given in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2.
The main task of the joint technical committee is to prepare International Standards. Draft International
Standards adopted by the joint technical committee are circulated to national bodies for voting.
Publication as an International Standard requires approval by at least 75 % of the national bodies
casting a vote.
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights.
ISO/IEC 25063 was prepared by Joint Technical Committee ISO/IEC JTC 1, Information technology,
Subcommittee SC 7, Software and systems engineering, in collaboration with Technical Committee
ISO/TC 159, Ergonomics, Subcommittee SC 4, Ergonomics of human-system interaction.
iv © ISO/IEC 2014 – All rights reserved
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
Introduction
[4]
The human-centred design approach of ISO 9241-210 is well established and focuses specifically
on making systems usable. Usability can be achieved by applying human-centred design and testing
throughout the life cycle. In order to enable a human-centred approach to be adopted, it is important
that all the relevant types of information related to usability (information items) are identified and
communicated. This identification and communication enables the usability of a system to be designed
and tested.
This International Standard provides a framework and consistent terminology for describing the context
of use of an interactive system. It is intended to assist developers in documenting and communicating
usability-related information through the system development life cycle.
The Common Industry Format (CIF) for Usability family of International Standards is described in
[19] [17]
ISO/IEC TR 25060 and is part of the SQuaRE series (ISO/IEC 25000 to ISO/IEC 25099) of standards
on systems and software product quality requirements and evaluation.
The CIF family of standards uses definitions that are consistent with the ISO 9241 series of standards
(Ergonomics of human system interaction), as this is the terminology that is normally used for this
subject matter.
CIF standards are planned for the following information items:
— Context of use description (ISO/IEC 25063);
— User needs report (ISO/IEC 25064);
— User requirements specification (planned ISO/IEC 25065);
— User interaction specification;
— User interface specification;
— Evaluation report (planned ISO/IEC 25066);
— Field data report.
The CIF standards are part of the “Extension Division” of the ISO/IEC 25000 “SQuaRE” series of
International Standards (see Figure 1).
Figure 1 — Organization of SQuaRE series of International Standards
[2] [18]
Context of use is defined in ISO 9241-11. The system quality model in ISO/IEC 25010 incorporates
context of use.
© ISO/IEC 2014 – All rights reserved v
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
[4]
Figure 2 — Relationship of CIF documents to user centred design in ISO 9241-210 and system
[7]
life cycle processes in ISO/IEC 15288
Figure 2 illustrates the interdependence of these information items with the human-centred design
[4]
activities described in ISO 9241-210 as well as the corresponding System Life Cycle processes
[7]
described in ISO/IEC 15288. The figure depicts the activities as a set of intersecting areas. The circles
overlap to represent that the activities are not separate, but rather, overlapping in time and scope and
the outcome of each activity provides the input to one or more other activities. As each human-centred
design activity can provide input to any other, there is no starting point, no end point, or linear process
intended.
Human-centred design relies on user needs that are first identified based on the Context of Use analysis.
User needs are documented in the User Needs Report (ISO/IEC 25064), which is an intermediate
deliverable that links the Context of Use Description (ISO/IEC 25063) that contains Information about
the users, their tasks and the organizational and physical environment, to the user requirements.
These items are developed during the Stakeholders Requirements Definition Process described in
[7]
ISO/IEC 15288.
The “Produce design solutions” activity focuses on designing user interaction that meets user
requirements. This activity takes place during the Architectural Design, Implementation, and Integration
[7]
processes described in ISO/IEC 15288 and produces the information items “User Interaction
Specification” and the “User Interface Specification”.
The “Evaluate” activity starts at the earliest stages in the project, evaluating design concepts to obtain
a better understanding of the user needs. Design solutions can be evaluated multiple times as the
interactive system is being developed, and can produce various types of evaluation report, and usability
[20] [7]
data such as that described in ISO/IEC 25062 can support the ISO/IEC 15288 validation process
that confirms that the system complies with the stakeholder requirements.
vi © ISO/IEC 2014 – All rights reserved
INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
Systems and software engineering — Systems and software
product Quality Requirements and Evaluation (SQuaRE) —
Common Industry Format (CIF) for usability: Context of use
description
1 Scope
This International Standard specifies the contents of both high-level and detailed descriptions of context
of use for an existing, intended, designed or implemented system, product or service.
The context of use description is applicable to software and hardware systems, products or services
(excluding generic products, such as a display screen or keyboard). The description of the context of
use is intended to be used as part of system-level documentation resulting from development processes
such as those in ISO 9241-210 and ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 7 process standards.
This International Standard does not prescribe any kind of method, life cycle or process.
The context of use information item can be integrated into any type of process model.
[16] [9]
NOTE For the purpose of establishing process models, ISO/IEC TR 24774 and ISO/IEC 15504-2 specify
[8]
the format and conformance requirements for process models, respectively. In addition, ISO/IEC 15289 defines
the types and content of information items developed and used in process models for system and software life cycle
[10] [11]
management. ISO/IEC 15504-5 and ISO/IEC 15504-6 define work products, including information items,
for the purpose of process capability assessment. Process models and associated information items for human-
[13] [12]
centred design of interactive systems are contained in ISO/TR 18529 and ISO/TS 18152 , respectively.
This International Standard also describes the purposes for which context of use descriptions are used,
and identifies the intended users of context of use descriptions.
While this International Standard specifies the required content elements of a context of use description,
it does not prescribe any particular structure or layout for documenting the context of use.
2 Conformance
A description of the context of use conforms to this International Standard if it contains all the required
elements specified in Clause 5.
3 Terms and definitions
For the purposes of this document, the following terms and definitions apply.
3.1
accessibility
extent to which products, systems, services, environments and facilities can be used by people from
a population with the widest range of characteristics and capabilities to achieve a specified goal in a
specified context of use
Note 1 to entry: Context of use includes direct use or use supported by assistive technologies.
[SOURCE: ISO 26800:2011, 2.1]
© ISO/IEC 2014 – All rights reserved 1
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
3.2
context of use
users, tasks, equipment (hardware, software and materials), and the physical and social environments
in which a system, product or service is used
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-11:1998, 3.5, modified — In the definition, “product” has been replaced by “system,
product or service”.]
Note 1 to entry: In this International Standard, equipment is described as part of the technical and technological
environment.
3.3
effectiveness
accuracy and completeness with which users achieve specified goals
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-11:1998, 3.2]
3.4
efficiency
resources expended in relation to the accuracy and completeness with which users achieve goals
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-11:1998, 3.3]
3.5
goal
intended outcome
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-11:1998, 3.8]
3.6
human-centred design
approach to system design and development that aims to make interactive systems more usable by
focusing on the use of the system; applying human factors, ergonomics and usability knowledge and
techniques
Note 1 to entry: The term “human-centred design” is used rather than “user-centred design” in order to emphasize
that this standard also addresses impacts on a number of stakeholders, not just those typically considered as
users. However, in practice, these terms are often used synonymously.
Note 2 to entry: Usable systems can provide a number of benefits including improved productivity, enhanced user
wellbeing, avoidance of stress, increased accessibility, and reduced risk of harm.
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-210:2010, 2.7]
3.7
information item
separately identifiable body of information that is produced and stored for human use during a system
or software life cycle
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC 15289:2006, 5.11]
3.8
interactive system
combination of hardware, software and/or services that receives input from and communicates output
to users
Note 1 to entry: This includes, where appropriate, packaging, branding, user documentation, online help, support
and training.
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-210:2010, 2.8]
2 © ISO/IEC 2014 – All rights reserved
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
3.9
persona
representation of a type of user that includes a concise summary of the characteristics of the user that
is most informative to the design or illustrative of specific user requirements
Note 1 to entry: A persona typically includes behaviour patterns, goals, skills, attitudes, and environment, with a
few fictional personal details to make the persona a realistic character.
3.10
requirement
condition or capability that must be met or possessed by a system, system component, product, or
service to satisfy an agreement, standard, specification, or other formally imposed documents
Note 1 to entry: Requirements include the quantified and documented needs, wants, and expectations of the
sponsor, customer, and other stakeholders.
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765:2010, 3.2506]
3.11
satisfaction
freedom from discomfort, and positive attitudes towards the use of the product
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-11:1998, 3.4]
3.12
stakeholder
individual or organization having a right, share, claim, or interest in a system or in its possession of
characteristics that meet their needs and expectations
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC 15288:2008, 4.29]
3.13
system
combination of interacting elements organized to achieve one or more stated purposes
Note 1 to entry: A system may be considered as a product or as the services it provides.
Note 2 to entry: In practice, the interpretation of its meaning is frequently clarified by the use of an associative
noun, e.g. aircraft system. Alternatively the word system may be substituted simply by a context-dependent
synonym, e.g. aircraft, though this may then obscure a system principles perspective.
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC 15288:2008, 4.31]
3.14
task
activities required to achieve a goal
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-11:1998, 3.9]
3.15
usability
extent to which a system, product or service can be used by specified users to achieve specified goals
with effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction in a specified context of use
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-210, 2.13]
3.16
user
person who interacts with a system, product or service
Note 1 to entry: A person who uses the output or service provided by a system. For example, a bank customer who
visits a branch, receives a paper statement, or carries out telephone banking using a call centre can be considered
a user.
© ISO/IEC 2014 – All rights reserved 3
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
[SOURCE: ISO 26800:2011, 2.10]
3.17
user experience
person’s perceptions and responses that result from the use and/or anticipated use of a product, system
or service
Note 1 to entry: User experience includes all the users’ emotions, beliefs, preferences, perceptions, physical and
psychological responses, behaviours and accomplishments that occur before, during and after use.
Note 2 to entry: User experience is a consequence of brand image, presentation, functionality, system performance,
interactive behaviour, and assistive capabilities of the interactive system; the user’s internal and physical state
resulting from prior experiences, attitudes, skills and personality; and the context of use.
Note 3 to entry: Usability, when interpreted from the perspective of the users’ personal goals, can include the
kind of perceptual and emotional aspects typically associated with user experience. Usability criteria can be
established so as to assess aspects of user experience.
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-210:2010, 2.15]
3.18
user interface
all components of an interactive system (software or hardware) that provide information and controls
for the user to accomplish specific tasks with the interactive system
[SOURCE: ISO 9241-110:2006, 3.9]
3.19
user need
prerequisite identified as necessary for a user, or a set of users, to achieve an intended outcome, implied
or stated within a specific context of use
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC 25064:2013, 4.19]
3.20
user requirements
usage requirements
requirements for use that provide the basis for design and evaluation of interactive systems to meet
identified user needs
Note 1 to entry: User requirements are derived from user needs and capabilities in order to make use of the
system in an effective, efficient, safe and satisfying manner.
Note 2 to entry: User requirements specify the extent to which user needs and capabilities are to be met when
using the system. They are not requirements on the users.
Note 3 to entry: In software-engineering terms, user requirements comprise both “functional” and “non-
functional” requirements based on user needs and capabilities.
[SOURCE: ISO/IEC TR 25060:2010, 2.21]
4 Purposes and types of context of use descriptions
4.1 General
The description of the context of use provides common information that is needed for use in conjunction
with the other information items that are to be produced relating to human centred design. Information
about the context of use provides a basis for designing a product that is usable in the intended context of
use, and helps maintain a human-centred design focus within the project.
4 © ISO/IEC 2014 – All rights reserved
ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
Context of use information can be captured in a variety of forms, and descriptions of the context of use
can be formatted to meet the needs of particular audiences.
EXAMPLE 1 Sources of context of use information include:
— Documentation of conducted interviews with users.
— Documentation of observations of users in their real environment.
— Diaries completed by users over a period of time describing their real context of use.
— Documentation of conducted observations of users.
— Documentation of user performance measurements.
— Video files of individual users showing them in their real environment.
EXAMPLE 2 Examples of different representations that can be used to describe the context of use (or parts of
the context of use) include:
— Complete descriptions of users, tasks, equipment (hardware, software and materials), and the physical and
social environments that constitute a detailed context of use description using a structured format (such as
Annex C).
— Narrative descriptions of the context of use (referred to as “scenarios of use”, “context scenarios”, “as is”
scenarios or “problem scenarios”) for each user group, typically based on user interviews.
— Descriptions of users in terms of personas, which represent a type of user by providing a concise summary
of characteristics of an instance of a user, and can include issues such as goals, tasks, skills, attitudes, and
environmental conditions.
The most common types of context of use descriptions are listed below, described in more detail in
the sub-clauses indicated. Depending on the particular design and development situation it could be
necessary to describe some or all of these.
4.2 Initial outline of the context of use
4.3 Detailed context of use descriptions
4.3.1 Current context of use
4.3.2 Intended context of use
4.3.3 Context of use specified as a part of user requirements
4.3.4 Context of use of the implemented system, product or service
4.3.5 Context of use of the deployed system, product or service
4.4 Context of use for an evaluation
4.5 Context of use as part of a system, product or service description
The potential users of each type of context of use description are listed in Annex B.
A context of use description should be treated as an evolving repository of information. The content of
the description will grow as an increasing amount of detail is added in the course of the design process.
NOTE Information about a particular context of use can be used in the development of more than one
interactive system.
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ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
4.2 Initial outline of the context of use
An initial description of the context of use can be based on the assumptions of the project (often derived
from the business case). At this stage it will not be complete, although some aspects, such as the potential
users, will be known. For more details, see Annex A.
4.3 Detailed context of use descriptions
4.3.1 Current context of use
Analysis of the context of use of existing or similar systems, products or services (including manual
systems if appropriate) can provide information on a whole range of context issues including deficiencies
and baseline levels of performance and satisfaction. Information about the current context of use can be
used to identify needs, problems and constraints that might otherwise be overlooked, but which design
of the future system should take account of.
NOTE 1 Some aspects of the current context will persist, even if the system is highly novel.
NOTE 2 If a product concept is available or an existing product (such as a predecessor or a competitive product)
is used as the reference point for a new design, information in the current context of use will provide an outline of
the goals of the users of such a product, their tasks and the way in which the tasks are to be performed that will
be relevant for the intended context of use.
4.3.2 Intended context of use
The purpose of this description of the context of use is to provide a basis for designing the system,
product or service for the types of users who are intended to use it, the tasks that are to be undertaken
and the environment(s) in which it is intended to be used. It will incorporate the relevant aspects of the
existing context of use, if there is one.
The intended context of use of a system, product or service might include changes to the current context
of use.
EXAMPLE 1 A manufacturer of monitoring equipment, which is currently used by medical practitioners in
clinical settings, wishes to respond to the increasing demand for monitoring equipment that can be used by
patients, and their carers, in their own homes.
The context of use description should differentiate those components of the context of use that will
remain fixed and those components of the context of use that can be subject to change.
EXAMPLE 2 When designing an interactive whiteboard for a primary school, the teaching room is part of the
given technical environment, that can’t be changed. When designing a whole teaching room, the teaching room
can be designed in conjunction with the interactive whiteboard.
EXAMPLE 3 When designing a universal remote control, the products to be remote-controlled are part of the
given technical environment, that can’t be changed. When designing a remote control as part of a specific product,
the remote control is part of the system to be designed.
NOTE The intended context of use will be refined iteratively, taking account of an evolving understanding
of user and business needs and practical constraints including the development time and budget, until a realistic
range of user types and characteristics, environmental characteristics and tasks can be specified as part of user
requirements for which the system is required to achieve specified levels of usability.
4.3.3 Context of use specified as a part of user requirements
The context of use should be specified as a part of the user requirements specification to clearly
identify the conditions under which the requirements apply. Each relevant user, task and environmental
characteristic needs to be identified in order that the full range of contextual issues can be taken into
account in design.
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This makes the scope of user requirements explicit by defining the contexts of use in which the system
product or service is required to achieve acceptable levels of usability (derived from the intended context
of use).
NOTE The specified context of use could be documented separately for use in conjunction with the user
requirements, or the relevant parts could be embedded in the user requirements.
Practical constraints could mean that the specified context of use is a subset of the originally intended
context of use, or the results of user research could result in a specified context of use that is wider than
the originally intended context of use.
4.3.4 Context of use of the implemented system, product or service
The description of the context of use of the implemented system, product or service is often more
detailed than that specified as part of the user requirements, for example including details of tasks and
user interactions. This additional information should be documented and should provide the basis for
the specific context(s) to be used for evaluation (4.4) and context of use information that is included as
part of the product description (4.5).
NOTE Any differences between the originally intended context of use, the context of use specified as part
of the user requirements, and the context of use of the implemented system need to be identified, in case these
differences could affect the usability of the system.
4.3.5 Context of use of the deployed system, product or service
The context of use of the system, product or service after deployment takes account of any new ways the
system is being used, and is typically determined by follow-up evaluation studies.
NOTE Follow-up evaluation studies can be aimed at determining if the system/product/service is meeting its
requirements or at determining how its use is evolving. For example, users often find ways of using the system to
carry out tasks not included in the original context of use, or user groups not previously anticipated might start
using the system. Differences between the specified context of use and the context of use of the deployed system
may require changes in the design to accommodate the changed context of use.
4.4 Context of use for an evaluation
Depending on the purpose of the evaluation, the description of the context of use that is part of an
evaluation report will be derived from the current context of use of an existing or implemented system,
product or service, the intended context of use or the context of use in which user requirements apply.
The context of use for evaluation needs to be described as part of the test scenarios for user based
testing, and for expert inspections when these are based on usage scenarios.
Some components of the context of use are not applicable for every type of evaluation (for example,
tasks are not used for some types of inspections).
NOTE 1 For user-based testing, the context of use for evaluation needs to reproduce the key aspects of a subset
of the context of use in order for evaluation results to be valid.
NOTE 2 A future CIF standard is intended to provide requirements and recommendations for the content of
usability evaluation reports. When published, the provisions of that standard will supersede the provisions in
this International Standard for the context of use to be used for evaluation.
4.5 Context of use information included in a product description
A product description intended for potential acquirers of interactive systems or users should include a
description of the intended context of use of the product.
NOTE The level of detail can vary, for example a description on the Web might contain more detailed
information than a printed product description.
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ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
5 Elements of a context of use description
5.1 General
5.1.1 Overview of requirements and recommendations
A detailed description of the context of use as described in 4.3 (current, intended, part of user
requirements, for the implemented system and for the deployed system) shall include all the elements
specified in 5.2 to 5.6.
Other types of context of use description described in Clause 4 (initial outline, used for evaluations,
used as part of a product description) only need to include the items indicated in the relevant columns
in Table 1.
Table 1 — Items that can be included in a context of use description
Context
Context
Initial Detailed of use as
of use as
outline of description part of a
part of an
the context of the context product
evaluation
of use of use descript-
report
tion
Subject of this context of use description (5.2)
The system, product, service or concept (for which the context of
shall shall shall shall
use is being described).
The purpose of the system, product, service or concept from the
perspective of the intended users of the context of use descrip- shall shall shall shall
tion.
Summary of any preconditions and/or constraints that affect the
shall
design of the interactive system.
User groups (5.3)
Identification of all the user groups. Separate description of each
shall shall shall[1] shall
distinctly different user group of the system, product or service.
Identification of other stakeholders who could have an impact on
shall shall
the use of the system, product or service
The relationship between each relevant user group and the sys-
shall
tem, product or service in terms of key goals and constraints.
The characteristics of each user group including any users whose
physical or psychological characteristics are at the extremes of shall shall[1]
the normal range.
Description of characteristics that are judged to be likely to
affect usability with an explanation of the basis for the judge- shall shall*
ment.
Goals (5.4)
A list of the goals of the different user groups described as
intended outcomes that people are trying to accomplish (includ- shall shall shall[2] shall
ing personal goals when relevant).
Any goals defined by the organization that provides and/or
shall
develops the interactive system that are likely to affect usability.
Any responsibilities that are judged to be likely to affect usability shall shall*
Tasks (5.5)
A list of tasks that are to be carried out by each user group to
shall shall*
achieve their goals.
For each task, the characteristics that are judged to be likely to
affect usability with an explanation of the basis for the judge- shall shall*
ment.
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Table 1 (continued)
Context
Context
Initial Detailed of use as
of use as
outline of description part of a
part of an
the context of the context product
evaluation
of use of use descript-
report
tion
Environment(s) (5.6)
All actual or intended usage environments. shall shall*
Characteristics that are judged to be likely to affect usability. shall shall*
KEY
shall = required, blank = optional, * = if applicable,
[1] = the groups for which usability is being evaluated, [2] = the goals that are within the scope of the evaluation
The assessment of which characteristics are likely to affect usability should be based on human factors
knowledge and any previous experience with this type of system, product or service.
EXAMPLE It would not be necessary to include “sufficient electrical power” and “absence of vibrations” in
the description of the context of use of office software, even though vibrations would negatively affect mouse
pointing accuracy, and a power outage would stop the system altogether.
There is always some uncertainty about which characteristics of the context of use will definitely affect
usability and which will not. Therefore the extent of the description of the context of use is a matter of
judgement of the likelihood of the impact of each characteristic on usability. There are risks associated
with either underspecifying or overspecifying the context of use.
A description of the current context of use can include any identified problems that are observed or
reported (see 5.7).
5.1.2 Scope of the context of use
A context of use description can be of one instance of a context of use, or could include a range of contexts
of use in which the system, product or service is used, or in which it is intended to be used.
The description could also clarify how the context of use changes with time (for example, users’ expertise,
tasks and usage environments could change as users gain more experience with using a system).
5.2 Subject of the context of use description
5.2.1 System, product or service and its purpose
The system, product, service or concept (for which the context of use is being described) shall be
identified.
EXAMPLE 1 A new planning tool for ergonomic seating design is to be developed. There is no similar product
available, nor a detailed product specification. There is a concept of the product, focusing on the characteristics of
the product’s capabilities, design guidelines and innovations to be introduced in the product.
The purpose of the system, product, service or concept shall be described. This description shall be from
the perspective of the intended users of the context of use description (for example the development
team).
NOTE This provides the basis for identifying and describing the context of use. It is important to identify and
resolve any discrepancies between the intended or assumed purpose of the system, product or service, and the
actual usage identified as a result of user research.
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ISO/IEC 25063:2014(E)
The scope of what is the subject of design or evaluation will determine what needs to be described as
part of the context of use.
EXAMPLE 2 When designing or evaluating software for an existing model of cell phone, the software is the
subject of the context of use description and the physical cell phone is part of the technical environment that is
described in the context of use. When designing or evaluating a cell phone and its software, bot
...
Frequently Asked Questions
EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017 is a standard published by the European Committee for Standardization (CEN). Its full title is "Systems and software engineering - Systems and software product Quality Requirements and Evaluation (SQuaRE) - Common Industry Format (CIF) for usability: Context of use description (ISO/IEC 25063:2014)". This standard covers: ISO/IEC 25063:2014 describes the Common Industry Format (CIF) for context of use descriptions and specifies the contents of both high-level and detailed descriptions of the context of use for an existing, intended, implemented or deployed system. A context-of-use description includes information about the users and other stakeholder groups, the characteristics of each user group, the goals of the users, the tasks of the users, and the environment(s) in which the system is used. The context of use description is applicable to software and hardware systems, products or services (excluding generic products, such as a display screen or keyboard). It is important to gather and analyse information on the current context in order to understand and then describe the context that will apply in the future system. The context of use description provides a collection of data relevant for analysis, specification, design and evaluation of an interactive system from the perspective of the various user groups and other stakeholders.
ISO/IEC 25063:2014 describes the Common Industry Format (CIF) for context of use descriptions and specifies the contents of both high-level and detailed descriptions of the context of use for an existing, intended, implemented or deployed system. A context-of-use description includes information about the users and other stakeholder groups, the characteristics of each user group, the goals of the users, the tasks of the users, and the environment(s) in which the system is used. The context of use description is applicable to software and hardware systems, products or services (excluding generic products, such as a display screen or keyboard). It is important to gather and analyse information on the current context in order to understand and then describe the context that will apply in the future system. The context of use description provides a collection of data relevant for analysis, specification, design and evaluation of an interactive system from the perspective of the various user groups and other stakeholders.
EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017 is classified under the following ICS (International Classification for Standards) categories: 35.080 - Software. The ICS classification helps identify the subject area and facilitates finding related standards.
You can purchase EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017 directly from iTeh Standards. The document is available in PDF format and is delivered instantly after payment. Add the standard to your cart and complete the secure checkout process. iTeh Standards is an authorized distributor of CEN standards.
記事のタイトル:EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017 - システムおよびソフトウェアエンジニアリング - システムおよびソフトウェア製品の品質要求および評価(SQuaRE)- 使いやすさのための共通業界フォーマット(CIF):使用コンテキストの説明(ISO/IEC 25063:2014) 記事の内容:ISO/IEC 25063:2014は、既存の、意図された、実装された、または展開されたシステムの使用コンテキストの高レベルおよび詳細な説明の内容を指定する使いやすさのための共通業界フォーマット(CIF)について説明しています。使用コンテキストの説明には、ユーザーやその他の利害関係者グループに関する情報、各ユーザーグループの特性、ユーザーの目標、ユーザーのタスク、およびシステムの使用環境などが含まれます。 使用コンテキストの説明は、ソフトウェアおよびハードウェアシステム、製品、またはサービスに適用されます(ディスプレイスクリーンやキーボードなどの一般的な製品は除外されます)。将来のシステムに適用されるコンテキストを理解し、説明するために、現在のコンテキストに関する情報を収集し分析することが重要です。使用コンテキストの説明は、さまざまなユーザーグループと利害関係者の視点から、インタラクティブなシステムの分析、仕様、設計、評価のための関連データを提供します。
The article discusses EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017, which focuses on systems and software engineering. Specifically, it talks about the Common Industry Format (CIF) for usability, specifically in relation to context of use descriptions. The article explains that the CIF specifies what should be included in high-level and detailed descriptions of the context of use for a system. This includes information about users, stakeholder groups, user goals and tasks, and the system's environment. The context of use description is applicable to software and hardware systems, excluding generic products. Understanding and describing the current and future contexts in which the system is used is important for analysis, specification, design, and evaluation purposes. The context of use description provides relevant data for these processes from the perspective of different user groups and stakeholders.
기사 제목 : EN ISO/IEC 25063:2017 - 시스템 및 소프트웨어 공학 - 시스템 및 소프트웨어 제품 품질 요구사항 및 평가 (SQuaRE) - 사용성을 위한 공통 산업 형식 (CIF) : 사용 맥락 설명 (ISO/IEC 25063:2014) 기사 내용: ISO/IEC 25063:2014는 기존 시스템에 대한 사용 맥락 설명의 공통 산업 형식 (CIF)을 설명하고, 높은 수준과 상세한 설명의 내용을 지정합니다. 사용 맥락 설명에는 사용자와 그 외 이해관계자 그룹, 각 사용자 그룹의 특성, 사용자의 목표, 사용자의 작업, 그리고 시스템이 사용되는 환경에 대한 정보가 포함됩니다. 사용 맥락 설명은 소프트웨어 및 하드웨어 시스템, 제품 또는 서비스에 적용됩니다 (디스플레이 스크린이나 키보드 등과 같은 제너릭 제품은 제외됩니다). 현재 맥락에 대한 정보를 수집하고 분석하여 미래 시스템에서 적용될 맥락을 이해하고 설명하는 것이 중요합니다. 사용 맥락 설명은 다양한 사용자 그룹과 이해관계자의 관점에서 상호작용 시스템의 분석, 명세, 설계 및 평가에 필요한 데이터 모음을 제공합니다.








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