Wizard of Oz Prototypes are prototypes used to emulate the automated functionality of an artifact even though said functionality happens as a result of a person making it happen manually behind the scenes.
GInI’s CInP Handbook defines " Wizard of Oz Prototypes " as simulations where a system appears automated, but a human manually operates it behind the scenes—e.g., a chatbot mimicked by a typist—to test user interaction without full development. This low-fidelity method, named after the story’s deceptive wizard, validates concepts early. " User Experience Prototypes " (A) is broad, not specific. " Looks-Like Prototypes " (B) focus on appearance, not function. " Works-Like Prototypes " (D) demonstrate real mechanics, not illusions. Option C matches GInI’s terminology, aligning with the original answer, embodying a clever, resource-efficient prototyping strategy—a GInI hallmark for rapid validation.
[Reference: GInI CInP Handbook, Section on Prototyping Types., , ]
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