Gutenberg Diagram
A design principle that suggests a pattern for how people read a webpage, dividing it into four quadrants and emphasizing the importance of the top-left and bottom-right areas.
A design principle that suggests a pattern for how people read a webpage, dividing it into four quadrants and emphasizing the importance of the top-left and bottom-right areas.
A set of principles describing how the human mind organizes visual information into meaningful wholes.
An approach to design where content is prioritized and designed before other elements like layout and visual design.
The concept in web design referring to the portion of a webpage that is visible without scrolling, with content placed above the fold being more immediately visible.
A cognitive bias where people overemphasize information that is placed prominently or in a way that catches their attention first.
A visual tool used to map out the components and features of a product, showing how they relate to each other and to the overall product vision.
A Gestalt principle where elements that are located within the same closed region are perceived as being grouped together.
A visual tool for organizing information, typically starting with a central concept and branching out to related ideas and details.
A design flaw where users mistakenly believe they have reached the end of the content due to a misleading visual cue.