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  <front>
    <journal-meta />
    <article-meta>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>Mobile Web Usability Standards Compliance Service</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <aff id="aff0">
          <label>0</label>
          <institution>Caroline Collier Georgia College &amp; State University</institution>
          ,
          <addr-line>CBX 012, Milledgeville, GA 31061</addr-line>
          ,
          <country country="US">USA</country>
        </aff>
        <aff id="aff1">
          <label>1</label>
          <institution>Supervisor: Dr. Ajantha Dahanayake Department of Systems Engineering, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands &amp; Georgia College &amp; State University</institution>
          ,
          <addr-line>CBX 012, Milledgeville, GA 31061</addr-line>
          ,
          <country country="US">USA</country>
        </aff>
      </contrib-group>
      <abstract>
        <p>Developing a mobile Web site represents an opportunity to reach a large part of the Web audience for an organization. It is also a challenge as Web engineers have to follow specific guidelines to make the mobile Web site usable. Nowadays, most mobile Web sites are not usable to varying degrees. Supporting Web engineers in their quest for mobile Web usability requires a Mobile Web Usability Standards Compliance Service (MWUCS), which incorporates the mobile Web usability standards into the mobile Web site development lifecycle. Our research aims at developing a MWUCS and a tool to put it into practice.</p>
      </abstract>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <sec id="sec-1">
      <title>Mobile Web Usability and W3C Initiative</title>
      <p>Mobile Web usability has some specific and unique characteristics due to the nature
of the mobile device and its use. Therefore, mobile Web usability issues require a
unique initiative.</p>
      <p>As a first step towards mobile Web usability, the World Wide Web (W3C) published
the Mobile Web Best Practices (MWBP) as part of the Mobile Web Initiative1. The
MWBP are composed of 60 guidelines which aim at improving mobile Web usability.
They have become the most comprehensive and accepted guidelines to test mobile
Web usability due to their device-independent nature.
3</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-2">
      <title>Mobile Web Usability Issues</title>
      <p>An exploratory survey was administered to 62 Web engineers aimed at identifying the
mobile Web usability issues. The survey reveals that most mobile Web sites do not
comply with the MWBP. The lack of compliance is the result of the following three
issues:
- Lack of time: Web engineers lack time to create usable mobile Web sites. They work
under short deadlines and complying with the 60 MWBP is time-consuming. If
mobile Web usability is evaluated, it is usually evaluated in the latter phases of the
development process, when the Web site implementation is almost complete. Thus,
correcting the detected usability errors implies a complete redesign of the application,
which cannot usually be afforded.
- Impracticability of the MWBP: The MWBP are complex and difficult to understand.
Web engineers perceived them as impractical.
- Absence of a methodology for the incorporation of MWBP into the mobile Web site
development lifecycle: A methodology for the incorporation of the MWBP into the
mobile Web site development is not available. It should include a method to test the
MWBP during the mobile Web site development.
4</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-3">
      <title>Research Objective, Questions and Approach</title>
      <sec id="sec-3-1">
        <title>Our research objective is to:</title>
        <p>“Formulate an approach for the incorporation of an agile mobile Web usability
standards compliance service (MWUCS) into the mobile Web application
development lifecycle.”
1 The Mobile Web Best Practices 1.0 are available at http://www.w3.org/TR/mobile-bp/
To help us in the development of our research approach, we formulate our main
research question as:
How can we formulate an agile MWUCS so that Web engineers are capable of
incorporating usability into mobile Web sites during the mobile Web application
development lifecycle?</p>
      </sec>
      <sec id="sec-3-2">
        <title>This research question can be decomposed into two sub-questions:</title>
        <p>What is the design principle that incorporates a mobile Web usability standards
compliance service as a subset of building blocks of the mobile Web application
development lifecycle?
In the construction industry, the construction standards are progressively incorporated
at different stages of the building construction. Several inspections are performed
throughout the building construction allowing contractors to correct code deviations
before the building is completed. The approach used in the construction industry to
incorporate the construction standards into the building development process is an
inspiration for the first sub-question. The purpose of the first sub-question is to
explore the conceptual foundation of the MWUCS. The MWUCS can be defined as a
series of activities of intangible nature, which assist Web engineers with the
incorporation of MWBP into the mobile Web site development process. It should be
agile in nature to satisfy the attempt to offer faster and nimbler mobile Web
development processes. Instruments such as two case studies and development
methodology literature have deepened our understanding of the mobile Web usability
issues and contribute to the answer of the sub-question 1.</p>
        <p>Is it possible to engineer an automated support service for mobile Web usability
incorporation and evaluation during the mobile Web application development
lifecycle, which will provide Web engineers with the ability needed to test the
compliance to mobile Web standards?
The purpose of the second question is to evaluate our theory by exploring its
feasibility and applicability. Based on the theory derived from sub-question 1, a
prototype to support the agile MWUCS will be constructed for this evaluation. The
two case studies and some of the original survey respondents will participate to the
evaluation of the theory.</p>
        <p>
          Due to the intrinsic nature of our research question and sub-questions, our research is
mainly influenced by the Design Science philosophy. Our research strategy is based
on the processes of build and evaluate as well as the IT artifacts of constructs, models,
methods, and instantiations as presented by March and Smith [
          <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref15">15</xref>
          ].
5
        </p>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-4">
      <title>Analytical Framework</title>
      <p>
        The analytical framework defined by Sol [
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref16">16</xref>
        ] is used to structure the MWUCS
methodology.
- Way of Thinking: It delineates the underlying philosophy of our MWUCS design
theory and defines the assumptions in the process of MWUCS theory formulation.
- Way of Modeling: The adoption of the four-layer meta-modeling architecture, also
known as MOF [
        <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref17">17</xref>
        ], becomes the basis of the formal specification of our MWUCS
conceptual foundation based on the way of thinking. The elaboration of a metamodel,
corresponding to the M-2 layer of the MOF, defines the domain independent, generic
concepts and relationships of the MWUCS conceptual foundation.
- Way of Controlling: It presents the usability tests associated with the MWUCS.
- Way of Working: It explains how to use the MWUCS to incorporate the usability
standards into the mobile Web site development process.
      </p>
      <p>The ways of modeling, controlling, and working formalize the conceptual foundation
of our MWUCS design principle and lead to the way of supporting.
- Way of Supporting: The MWUCS conceptual foundation entices the building of a
prototype which comprises a checker to test the compliance of mobile Web sites with
the MWBP. The prototype offers the option to perform two types of tests: extensive
test or partial tests. The extensive test checks the compliance of a mobile Web site
with the complete set of MWBP. It is initiated once at the end of the mobile Web site
development and corresponds to the final test. The partial tests check the compliance
of a mobile Web site with some subsets of the MWBP. They are implemented at
different stages during the mobile Web site development process. The checker
generates a report presenting the test results and suggesting solutions to improve the
site’s mobile Web usability.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-5">
      <title>Conclusion</title>
      <p>We have presented our research work and an overview of our research methodology.
The MWUCS will assist the Web engineers in their quest of mobile Web usability by
incorporating the MWBP into the mobile Web site development lifecycle. At this
point, we have completed the literature review and the research proposal. We are in
the process of identifying the conceptual underpinning which defines the
methodology that supports the MWUCS during the mobile Web site development
lifecycle. We have also developed a discovery prototype MWUCS is using to fine
tune our conceptual model of MWUCS.</p>
    </sec>
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