Storyboarding study

This article was a writeup of a study done at Tufts university.  I will admit that I skimmed much of it due to poor time management and necessary prioritization, but I did closely read the results.  The results were focused on effective storyboarding techniques, and while the results were similar to what had been established in class, it was good to see written confirmation that our gut instinct was more or less correct.  

An effective storyboard briefly explains the problem and the proposed solution. It does not have extraneous detail, has enough frames to explain the idea but not enough to confuse, and will often have small bits of text to add more context and to clarify the situation.  

Discussion Questions:

Would a video be an effective storyboard?  Or would that be a different thing altogether?

Is a storyboard a user experience in itself?  As such, would making a successful one require the same steps as the product it is attempting to explain?

How simplified can a storyboard get before it stops conveying the needed information?

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