Visual Perception 101: Designing Better User Interfaces by Calvin Arterberry
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Transcript of Visual Perception 101: Designing Better User Interfaces by Calvin Arterberry
I have Expereince in:
Game DesignerGame TesterWeb DesignerTeacher: HighschoolCollege ProfessorGraphic DesignerTheraputic MentorWeb Programmer
What is Visual Perception? The ability to interpret the surrounding environment by processing information that is contained in visible light. The resulting percep-tion is also known as eyesight, sight, or vision (adjectival form: visu-al, optical, or ocular)
Visual memory is the ability to retain information over an ade-quate period of time.
Visual sequential memory is the ability to perceive and remember a se-quence of objects, letters, words, and other symbols in the same order as originally seen.
Visual form constancyis the ability to recognize objects as they change size, shape, or orientation.
Visual spatial skills refer to the ability to understand directional concepts that organize external visual space. These skills allow an individual to develop spa-tial concepts, such as right and left, front and back, and up and down as they relate to their body and to objects in space.
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Center Focus/ Field of Vision
Visual Focus / Peripheral Vision Activity Grab a small handful of LEGOs
Keep your head stright in front of you
Play with the LEGOs
Turn your head sideways so that you can only see the LEGOs in your peripheral vision
The TakeawayNotice how hard it is to handle objects
Peripheral vison is used for detecting motion, environmental awareness.
Bottom Up Processing Object cented Theories Geons are the simple 2D or 3D forms such as cylinders, bricks, wedges, cones, circles and rectangles corresponding to the simple parts of an ob-ject in Biederman’s Recognition-by-components theory. The theory pro-poses that the visual input is matched against structural representations
Top Down Processing
Our brains make the best guess to what we are seeing. Built on our expereinces/prior knowledge
Assume illumination is coming from top
Vantage paint important [email protected]
Top Down/ Bottom Up Processing ActivityRead drawing prompt
Sketch object on white paper
Trace over drawing marking just the intersection points like illustrated below but dont add numbers. This is supposed to be hard.
The TakeawayKeep your form language consistant and clearly differentiated contrast is key.
Extensive User Testing in improtant: Age and culture variance very important.
Use established patterns button design patterns
Cone Distribution / Color Sensitivities
Color is a physiological and psychological response to lightMost sensitive to green wavelength: distiguish more shadesRed spectum has the most overlap with the other wavelengths triggered more often Blue least sensitive
Luminance Or Brightness
Luminance is comparativeBased on available lightDetermines Focus
Value is more important than huecontrast
Overlap or Occlusion Visual Field PositionFamiliar Size: Human Scale
Texture Gradient: Degradation of fidelityAtmospheric Perspective
The Gleaners - Jean Francois Millets
BibliographyCognition The Thinking Animal (Person Pretence Hall 2007)
The Color Sensitive Coneshttp://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/vision/colcon.html
Bleicher, Steven (2005). Contemporary Colour: Theory & Use. New York: Delmar. pp. iv, 23, 24. ISBN 978-1-4018-3740-2.
De Craen, A. J.; Roos, P. J.; Leonard De Vries, A.; Kleijnen, J. (1996). “Effect of colour of drugs: Sys-tematic review of perceived effect of drugs and of their effectiveness”. BMJ (Clinical research ed.) 313 (7072): 1624–1626. doi:10.1136/bmj.313.7072.1624. PMC 2359128. PMID 8991013.
Dolinska, B. (1999). “Empirical investigation into placebo effectiveness” (W). Irish Journal of Psy-chological Medicine 16 (2): 57–58. Retrieved 2009-04-29.
“Blue streetlights believed to prevent suicides, street crime”. The Seattle Times. 2008-12-11.
Shimbun, Yomiuri (December 10, 2008). “Blue streetlights may prevent crime, suicide”. Can Blue-Colored Light Prevent Suicide?