Design Ethics
The principles and guidelines that govern the moral and ethical aspects of design, ensuring that designs are socially responsible and beneficial.
The principles and guidelines that govern the moral and ethical aspects of design, ensuring that designs are socially responsible and beneficial.
An approach to design that challenges assumptions and provokes thought by creating speculative or provocative artifacts.
An approach to design that actively involves all stakeholders (e.g., employees, partners, customers) in the design process.
User-Centered Design (UCD) is an iterative design approach that focuses on understanding users' needs, preferences, and limitations throughout the design process.
The principle stating that there is a limit to the amount of complexity that users can handle, and if designers don't manage complexity, users will.
A collection of design patterns that provides solutions to common design problems.
A Gestalt principle stating that people will perceive and interpret ambiguous or complex images as the simplest form(s) possible.
A key aspect of Gestalt psychology where complex patterns arise out of relatively simple interactions.
A design philosophy that emphasizes core design principles over rigid adherence to standardized processes.