ANDRADE, Daniel de Sousa; http://lattes.cnpq.br/2479628054853306; ANDRADE, Daniel de Sousa.
Resumo:
Signaling helps individuals to move around efficiently, indicates them the right path
and what services can be found in an environment, as well as alerts for possible risks
or how to safely leave an emergency location. Despite this importance, there was a lack
of models to evaluate the quality of signaling systems, before, during and after their
implementation in the environment. This methodological proposal derives from the
first research approach present in the multi-method approach conceived by Queiroz
(2001), initially focused on the evaluation of desktop software interfaces, that
interestingly have similarity with signaling systems. Both depend on the ability to
interpret the information present in the interface so that the user can navigate in the
physical or virtual environment and, from there, make decisions to find the destination
they want to access. Thus, the objective of this research is to propose a systematic
alternative, aimed at the evaluation of a signaling system, implanted in a higher
education institution. Due to the context of the Covid-19 pandemic, the original
methodology was reformulated to allow the evaluation of the signaling system
selected as a case study without the participation of test users. The research consists
of a mixed approach, with exploratory objectives and procedures based on a case
study. The evaluation process focuses on the on-site inspection of the signaling system,
by means of a set of design guidelines, have been structured in four stages: 1)
Inspection of the signaling system in the light of the Brazilian Technical Standard ABNT
NBR 9050 (2015) recommendations; 2) Inspection of the signaling functions; 3) Analysis
of the diagramming of the selected system; and 4) Verification of architectural
components. In turn, the last three stages were based on recommendations extracted
from Galitz (2007), Gibson (2009), Schlatter and Levinson (2013), Calori and Vanden-
Eynden (2015), and Gabriele et al. (2018). At the end of the document, the proposed
method for converting the qualitative data obtained during the inspection process into
quantitative percentages is presented, in order to provide a qualitative and quantitative
diagnosis of design flaws found in the implemented signaling system, considered in
the case study.