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Research-based Web Design and Usability Guidelines
Posted by Lori Ayre on May 19, 2005
I just discovered an excellent resource for everyone involved in website design, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Research-based Web Design and Usability Guidelines (2003).
Each chapter (available as a separate PDF) focuses on a component such as Design Process and Evaluation, Accessibility, The Homepage, Page Layout, Navigation, Content Organization, etc. There are 17 chapters.
In addition to the guideline itself, each entry includes a comment section, source and usually an excellent example for how to apply the guideline.
Sample entry (no example with this one):
The website provides many ways to access the information including the downloadable chapters, one PDF file of the whole book and a sortable view of each guideline by relative importance, chapter, strength of evidence (research) and relative score.
Highlights:
Provide Useful Content (1:4)
Use Black Text on Plain, High-Contrast Backgrounds(11:1)
Provide Consistent Clickability Cues (10:1)
Use Clear Category Labels (9:1)
Ensure Usable Search Results (17:2)
Eliminate Horizontal Scrolling (8:1)
Organize Information Clearly (16:1)
Ensure Visual Consistency (11:2)
Use Clear Category Labels (9:1)
Display Information in a Directly Usable Format (2:1)
Put Critical Information Near the Top of the Website (16:2)
Use Unique and Descriptive Headings (9:2)
Format Common Items Consistently (11:3)
Provide Feedback on Users' Location (7:1)