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2026_HCII_Rukonić___Poster___Seeing_the_same_UX_artifacts_differently__Professional_vision_in_UCASD_teams.pdf
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Abstract
User-centered agile software development (UCASD) approach requires practitioners from agile software development (ASD) and user-centered design (UCD) disciplines to communicate and collaborate to develop useful and usable systems. This collaboration is mediated by the creation and use of various user experience (UX) artifacts. However, the ASD and UCD practitioners interpret and process information through socially distinct professional lenses. Drawing on Goodwin’s theory of professional vision (PV), this study investigates how multidisciplinary UCASD practitioners identify relevant information in four UX artifacts. Using eye-tracking we examined the eye movements of UCASD practitioners while looking at four UX artifacts: persona, storyboard, user journey map, and wireframe. Then, we compared the scanpath similarity using the MultiMatch algorithm and AOI strings and described the differences in the professional vision of ASD and UCD practitioners. The results revealed that while both groups exhibit high scanpath similarity, their viewing duration was significantly different. In addition, ASD practitioners had more consistent viewing patterns, while UCD practitioners had more individual approaches.
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Citations

Rukonić, L. (2026). Seeing the Same UX Artifacts Differently: Professional Vision in UCASD Teams. In Constantine Stephanidis, George Margetis, Stavroula Ntoa, Margherita Antona, Gavriel Salvendy (ed.), HCI International 2026 Posters - Part I. Springer. https://hdl.handle.net/2078.5/277675