Universal, intuitive, and permanent pictograms : a human-centered design process grounded in embodied cognition, semiotics, and visual perception / Daniel Bühler.
2021
TA166
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Title
Universal, intuitive, and permanent pictograms : a human-centered design process grounded in embodied cognition, semiotics, and visual perception / Daniel Bühler.
Author
ISBN
9783658323103 (electronic bk.)
3658323108 (electronic bk.)
3658323094
9783658323097
3658323108 (electronic bk.)
3658323094
9783658323097
Publication Details
Wiesbaden : Springer, 2021.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (337 pages)
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-658-32310-3 doi
Call Number
TA166
Dewey Decimal Classification
620.8/2
Summary
This book presents a complete human-centered design process (ISO 9241:210) that had two goals: to design universal, intuitive, and permanent pictograms and to develop a process for designing suitable pictograms. The book analyzes characteristics of visual representations, grounded in semiotics. It develops requirements for pictogram contents, relying on embodied cognition, and it derives content candidates in empirical studies on four continents. The book suggests that visual perception is universal, intuitive, and permanent. Consequently, it derives guidelines for content design from visual perception. Subsequently, pictogram prototypes are produced in a research through design process, using the guidelines and the content candidates. Evaluation studies suggest that the prototypes are a success. They are more suitable than established pictograms and they should be considered universal, intuitive, and permanent. In conclusion, a technical design process is proposed. Target audience Designers profit from this book because they will be able to further improve their designs Researchers profit because the findings contribute to research on universal and intuitive interaction Businesses profit because they will be able to adapt their processes, increasing suitability and profitability Dr. Daniel Buhler is a researcher in the Department of Applied Media Studies at Brandenburg University of Technology. He is interested in multimodal human-computer interaction, data-driven design, audiovisual perception and cognition, and semiotics. He holds master's degrees in three fields (MA, MEd, MFA). In his PhD, he brought these fields together conducting a complete human-centered design process, grounded in scientific theory, empirical research, and research through practice. Through universal, intuitive, and permanent designs, Daniel tries to improve interaction between people worldwide.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed October 13, 2021).
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Table of Contents
Introduction, objectives and summary of the design process
to visual representation
Justification, derivation and evaluation of pictogram contents
Development of a design system and production of pictograms
Evaluation of the produced pictograms
Conclusion, implications and future research projects.
to visual representation
Justification, derivation and evaluation of pictogram contents
Development of a design system and production of pictograms
Evaluation of the produced pictograms
Conclusion, implications and future research projects.