About
Friends
-
Loading…totallyrich 8 days ago -
Loading…rozza over 2 years ago -
Loading…komielan 29 days ago
Click here to check if anything new just came in.
March 07 2011
4 forgotten principles of usability testing
Many usability tests are worthless. Researchers recruit the wrong kind of participants, test the wrong kind of tasks, put too much weight on people's opinions, and expect participants to generate design solutions.March 01 2011
February 25 2011
November 24 2010
The Ten Faces of Innovation
UX Bookclub Portland will be reading this book this month. I'll be interested to hear what they have to say.November 10 2010
November 04 2010
Marginal Revolution: Keith Stanovich and what IQ is good for
higher-IQ people are more likely to behave rationally when they are told that a rationality issue is on the table, but less so otherwise.October 21 2010
Handrails
…Frank Gehry’s buildings, which from the outside look like they might not have windows, but in fact, he’s very careful to put in what he calls “handrails” so that wherever you are in the building you get a sight of view of the outside so you can orient yourself, and you can navigate more easily.
On ABC National Radio’s All in the Mind podcast, Ester Sternberg discusses the science of stress, place and wellbeing. The whole interview is fascinating, but her description of Gehry’s idea of handrails jumped out at me.
I haven’t come across Gehry’s concept of handrails before, but it appeals to me. It turns out that it’s a broader concept than Sternberg implies in her interview. The best definition I’ve found is in Karl E. Weick’s essay Designing for Thrownness:
Handrails are familiar details in an otherwise strange setting that give people a feeling of safety and heighten their willingness to wade into someone else’s preinterpreted world and try to become more attuned to what is already underway in it.
In the articles and interview I’ve found online, Gehry refers to handrails as the reason for the the symmetry of Walt Disney Concert Hall and his use of brick in The Strata Center.
Handrails. What a fantastic metaphor for providing people with a familiar guide in unfamiliar territory.
September 28 2010
Beyond the myth of the lone genius
Emotions… are “peopled” from the start. This dynamic turns out to play a critical role in the development of neural circuits that shape not only interaction, but autonomy too. In other words, the way we experience ourselves is inextricably linked to the way we experience others—so much so that, on close view, it’s hard to draw a concrete distinction between the other and the self.
Over at Salon, Joshua Wolf Shenk is examining creative partnerships. Along the way, he’s discussing recent research that indicates that creativity is inherently social. To get a clearer idea of how creative partnerships work, he’s looking at creative duos at work, starting with John Lennon and Paul McCartney. The series so far has been excellent.
This matches my own experience. I’m at my best when I’m working with a team. On my own, I can work through problems, but the solutions are never as good as when I’m bouncing ideas around with people I like and respect.
Related Posts
September 23 2010
September 10 2010
September 06 2010
By any other name
You make two paper bags and put a rose in each… [Y]ou mark one of the bags “Rose” and the other bag, although it also has roses inside, you label “Mowed Grass”… Then you invite people to sniff each bag… They they have to rate how pleasant the smell is, how sweet the smell is… And it turns out that a rose by another name—Mowed Grass—does not smell as sweet. People overwhelmingly said that the bag marked rose smelled to them, sweeter.
NPR has a fantastic interview with Lera Boroditsky, in which she describes this and a few other experiments she and her students have performed. She’s also written How Does Language Shape the Way We Think?, which goes into more detail (though not about the rose experiment).
(via Lost in Translation)
August 29 2010
August 24 2010
August 17 2010
August 14 2010
Maybe Soup is currently being updated? I'll try again automatically in a few seconds...
