Sensory Design
The practice of creating products and environments that engage multiple senses, enhancing user experience and emotional connection.
The practice of creating products and environments that engage multiple senses, enhancing user experience and emotional connection.
Interfaces that use multiple forms of interaction, such as visual, auditory, and tactile, to enhance user experience and accessibility.
A theory that explains how information is processed through different sensory modalities, such as visual, auditory, and tactile.
The perception of objects as unchanging despite changes in sensory input, such as changes in lighting, distance, or angle.
A type of sensory memory that briefly holds visual information for a fraction of a second.
The minimum difference in stimulus intensity that a person can detect, also known as the just noticeable difference (JND).
The phenomenon where people remember information better when it is presented through multiple sensory modalities rather than a single modality.
The process of encoding sensory input that has particular meaning or can be applied to a context, enabling deeper processing and memory retention.
The visual, auditory, and other sensory elements that represent a brand, such as logos, colors, and jingles.