articleJournal of Usability Studies archiveMay 1, 2009Closed access

Determining what individual SUS scores mean: adding an adjective rating scale

AT&T (United States) · Rice University

Abstract

The System Usability Scale (SUS) is an inexpensive, yet effective tool for assessing the usability of a product, including Web sites, cell phones, interactive voice response systems, TV applications, and more. It provides an easy-to-understand score from 0 (negative) to 100 (positive). While a 100-point scale is intuitive in many respects and allows for relative judgments, information describing how the numeric score translates into an absolute judgment of usability is not known. To help answer that question, a seven-point adjective-anchored Likert scale was added as an eleventh question to nearly 1,000 SUS surveys. Results show that the Likert scale scores correlate extremely well with the SUS scores…

Citation impact

3,082
total citations
FWCI
20.47
Percentile
100%
References
12
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Likert scale
  • Usability
  • Adjective
  • Scale (ratio)
  • Rating scale
  • Psychology
  • Computer science
  • Point (geometry)
No related works found for this paper.