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Designing with the Mind in Mind. Simple Guide to Understanding User Interface Design Guidelines

✍ Scribed by Jeff Johnson (Auth.)


Publisher
Morgan Kaufmann
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Leaves
236
Category
Library

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✦ Table of Contents


Content:
Front Matter, Page iii
Copyright, Page iv
Acknowledgments, Page vii
Foreword, Pages ix-xi
Introduction, Pages xiii-xvi
Chapter 1 - Our Perception is Biased, Pages 1-12
Chapter 2 - Our Vision is Optimized to See Structure, Pages 13-27
Chapter 3 - We Seek and Use Visual Structure, Pages 29-36
Chapter 4 - Our Color Vision is Limited, Pages 37-47
Chapter 5 - Our Peripheral Vision is Poor, Pages 49-66
Chapter 6 - Reading is Unnatural, Pages 67-85
Chapter 7 - Our Attention is Limited; Our Memory is Imperfect, Pages 87-105
Chapter 8 - Limits on Attention Shape Our Thought and Action, Pages 107-120
Chapter 9 - Recognition is Easy; Recall is Hard, Pages 121-129
Chapter 10 - Learning from Experience and Performing Learned Actions are Easy; Novel Actions, Problem Solving, and Calculation are Hard, Pages 131-148
Chapter 11 - Many Factors Affect Learning, Pages 149-167
Chapter 12 - Human Decision Making is Rarely Rational, Pages 169-185
Chapter 13 - Our Hand–Eye Coordination Follows Laws, Pages 187-194
Chapter 14 - We Have Time Requirements, Pages 195-216
Epilogue, Pages 217-218
Appendix - Well-known User-Interface Design Rules, Pages 219-222
Bibliography, Pages 223-227
Index, Pages 229-234


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