Feature Bloat
The excessive addition of features in a product, often leading to complexity and reduced usability.
The excessive addition of features in a product, often leading to complexity and reduced usability.
A cognitive bias where people overestimate the probability of success for difficult tasks and underestimate it for easy tasks.
A design approach that divides a system into smaller parts or modules that can be independently created, modified, replaced, or exchanged.
A fictional representation of a user segment, created based on user research to guide design decisions and ensure the product meets the needs of its target audience.
A model predicting the speed-accuracy trade-off in pointing tasks when using devices like a mouse, important for user interface design.
A behavior change method that encourages the adoption of small, easy-to-do habits that can lead to larger, sustainable behavior changes.
The tendency for people to prefer things that are easy to think about and understand.
A key aspect of Gestalt psychology in which simple geometrical objects are recognized independent of rotation, translation, and scale.
The arrangement of visual elements in a way that signifies their importance, guiding users' attention to the most critical parts of a design.