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Alistair Sutcliffe

Researcher at University of Manchester

Publications -  268
Citations -  10145

Alistair Sutcliffe is an academic researcher from University of Manchester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Usability & Requirements engineering. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 266 publications receiving 9553 citations. Previous affiliations of Alistair Sutcliffe include City University London & Northampton Community College.

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Meta-design: a manifesto for end-user development

TL;DR: In scientific and engineering domains, end users frequently develop complex systems with standard programming languages such as C++ and Java, however, only a minority of users adapt commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) software products.
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Supporting scenario-based requirements engineering

TL;DR: A method and software assistant tool for scenario based RE that integrates with use case approaches to object oriented development and suggests appropriate generic requirements to deal with the problems encountered is reported.
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Relationships and the social brain: integrating psychological and evolutionary perspectives.

TL;DR: This paper draws on both social and evolutionary psychology to argue that relationships at different layers serve different functions and have different cost-benefit profiles, and suggests that these trade-offs are related to the level of trust in a relationship, and that this is itself a function of the time invested in the relationship.
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A proposal for a scenario classification framework

TL;DR: The paper is an attempt to explore some of the issues underlying scenario-based approaches in requirements engineering and to propose a framework for their classification, a four-dimensional framework which advocates that a scenario- based approach can be well defined by its form, content, purpose and life cycle.
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Towards a theory of user judgment of aesthetics and user interface quality

TL;DR: A framework for users' design quality judgments based on Adaptive Decision Making theory is introduced, which describes judgment on quality attributes (usability, content/functionality, aesthetics, customisation and engagement) with dependencies on decision making arising from the user's background, task and context.