Design Psychology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Design Psychology

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Psychological Principles that affects people’s perception of your design – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Design Psychology


1
How to use psychology for design?
2
Psychological Principles that affects peoples
perception of your design
  • Mental Models
  • The Von Restorff Effect
  • Gestalt Principles
  • Visceral Reactions
  • The Psychology of Color
  • The Psychology of Shapes
  • Dual-Coding Theory
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis

3
Mental Models
  • Mental modelling is the process of mapping
    out what a person understands about the real
    world through experience and replicating those
    models in the design of something in the virtual
    space. This is all about trying to uncover your
    audiences intuitive process.
  • Think of your computer files and folders. Theyre
    based on the same old-school method of organizing
    hard files, so its easy for the user to
    understand -- despite the visual looking rather
    different.
  • Throughout your design process, do an intuitive
    check. Are your visuals moving right to left,
    top to bottom? Is your message clear and easy to
    understand, or is it unintentionally hidden?

4
The Von Restorff Effect
  • The Von Restorff effect is, quite simply, the
    idea that the oddball out is the one that gets
    remembered.
  • When designing, sometimes you want your
    audiences eye to be drawn to one spot --even if
    there are other design elements around it. This
    might mean using a different color, font, size,
    etc.
  • For instance, in CTA creation, you can use the
    Von Restorff to create contrast on your page and
    draw your users attention

5
Gestalt Principles
  • Gestalt psychology explores how elements are
    perceived in relation to each other visually. The
    gestalt principles, or gestalt laws, focus
    specifically on how design elements are grouped
    together.
  • Proximity The idea that when objects are placed
    in close proximity to one another, those objects
    are seen as a group rather than seen
    individually. 
  • Similarity Objects that look similar will be
    perceived as one object or as a part of the same
    group.
  • Closure Closure occurs when a shape is still
    perceived as a whole even when the object is not
    fully closed in reality.
  • Continuity Occurs as the eye moves naturally
    from one object to the other. This often happens
    through the creation of curved lines allowing the
    eye to flow with the line.
  • Figure ground When the eye notices an object
    as an object, it separates the object (figure)
    from the surrounding area (the ground). 

6
Visceral Reactions
  • Visceral Reaction is the kind of reaction that
    just comes from the gut.
  • Designing for visceral reactions is essentially
    designing to create a positive aesthetic
    impression. To some extent it takes just knowing
    what looks pleasing to people and what doesn't.

7
The Psychology of Color
  • We often associate different colors with feelings
    or thoughts, so designers have done a lot of
    research to find out which colors humans
    associate with different moods.
  • Blue Secure, calm, honest, trustworthy, strong,
    caring
  • Red Energy, love, exciting, action, bold,
    passionate
  • Orange Happy, sociable, friendly, affordable
  • Yellow Logical, optimistic, forward-thinking,
    confidence, playful
  • Purple Imaginative, creative, nostalgic
  • Green Growth, organic, natural, caring, fresh,
    earth
  • Black Sophistication, luxury, seductive, formal,
    authority
  • Multi-color Multi-channel, positive, playful,
    bold, boundless

8
The Psychology of Shapes
  • Like colors, humans associate different shapes
    with certain emotions and characteristics.
    Although less of a principle itself,
    the psychology of shapes boils down to studies
    that have shown which characteristics people
    match with certain shapes.
  • Circles, Ovals, and Ellipses Positive emotional
    messages attached to community, friendship, love,
    relationships, unity, and femininity.
  • Squares and Triangles Stability and balance,
    strength, professionalism, efficiency, power, and
    masculinity.
  • Vertical Lines Masculinity, strength, and
    aggression.
  • Horizontal Lines Community, tranquillity, and
    calm.

9
Dual-Coding Theory
  • Dual-coding theory is the idea that both visual
    and verbal cues can represent ideas, but using
    both can help the brain recall those ideas
    faster. In other words, we need visual and verbal
    information to digest and remember information.
  • When designing, this means illustrating ideas as
    much as possible, while still using verbal
    messages to fully explain ideas.

10
Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Whether we consciously think it or not, every
    decision we make goes through a cost benefit
    analysis, which is simply the process of weighing
    the costs and the benefits of an action before we
    take it.
  • If the costs outweigh the benefits, we dont take
    action.
  • As designers, our job is to make sure whatever we
    have designed has benefits that outweigh the
    costs. This means making our content as simple as
    possible for the audience while still
    fulfilling the goal of the content.
  • Think of a form submission on your landing pages.
    Say you want to offer your audience some
    top-of-the-funnel content like a template or
    high-level e-book.
  • When you strategize about getting users to fill
    out a form to claim this content, you have to
    remember to design your conversion process with
    your audience cost-benefit analysis in mind. In
    other words, don't ask for more than you need. 

11
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