Psychology Driven UX/UI/Web Design – PART 1 Fundamentals
Psychology Driven UX/UI/Web Design – PART 1 Fundamentals, available at $74.99, has an average rating of 3.9, with 82 lectures, 6 quizzes, based on 167 reviews, and has 1415 subscribers.
You will learn about Design effective and affective websites and apps by focusing on user psychology. Use recent findings in neuroscience and applied psychology when creating online content. Consider the instinctive, emotional and rational manifestations of the human mind when publishing on the web. Use subtleties of human cognition for designing balanced and aesthetically pleasing websites. Use gestalt and visual design principles to build strong visual hierarchies that guide users to their goals. Use color with greater psychological impact in web and app design. This course is ideal for individuals who are Web designers at all levels or App designers at all levels or User experience designers at all levels or User interface designers at all levels or Web content creators or Bloggers or Social media publishers or Online shop owners It is particularly useful for Web designers at all levels or App designers at all levels or User experience designers at all levels or User interface designers at all levels or Web content creators or Bloggers or Social media publishers or Online shop owners.
Enroll now: Psychology Driven UX/UI/Web Design – PART 1 Fundamentals
Summary
Title: Psychology Driven UX/UI/Web Design – PART 1 Fundamentals
Price: $74.99
Average Rating: 3.9
Number of Lectures: 82
Number of Quizzes: 6
Number of Published Lectures: 82
Number of Published Quizzes: 6
Number of Curriculum Items: 88
Number of Published Curriculum Objects: 88
Original Price: $19.99
Quality Status: approved
Status: Live
What You Will Learn
- Design effective and affective websites and apps by focusing on user psychology.
- Use recent findings in neuroscience and applied psychology when creating online content.
- Consider the instinctive, emotional and rational manifestations of the human mind when publishing on the web.
- Use subtleties of human cognition for designing balanced and aesthetically pleasing websites.
- Use gestalt and visual design principles to build strong visual hierarchies that guide users to their goals.
- Use color with greater psychological impact in web and app design.
Who Should Attend
- Web designers at all levels
- App designers at all levels
- User experience designers at all levels
- User interface designers at all levels
- Web content creators
- Bloggers
- Social media publishers
- Online shop owners
Target Audiences
- Web designers at all levels
- App designers at all levels
- User experience designers at all levels
- User interface designers at all levels
- Web content creators
- Bloggers
- Social media publishers
- Online shop owners
There are over 250 million regularly updated websites on the internet, that look, in one way or another, similar. How can yours stand out in this crowded place? How can you make sure that your first-time visitors have an engaging user experience and come again? And when they do, quickly find what they’re looking for to accomplish their goals? Can you change their mood to the better and use that positivity to achieve your website goals? Or anticipate their unconscious desires and cater to them?
This course will enable you to create effective and affective websites that are centered around how human beings work. By teaching you how to take findings in applied psychology into account when designing, it will empower you to predict how people will interact with your website and to take their perceptual biases, motivations, emotional states, and unconscious cognitions into consideration.
Only when you thoroughly understand the human mind can you hope to create designs that are simple yet pleasing and engaging at the same time. Psychology driven design aims to help accomplish that, by making you aware, at every step of a creative process, how humans think, feel and act. And the result of it is a product that appeals simultaneously to the intellect, emotions as well as unconscious desires of users.
Some people refer to this method as “designing for the mind” others as “designing for humans” or even “neurodesign”. We prefer the term “psychology driven design”, because the concept relies on findings in cognitive, behavioral and social psychology to determine, how, for example, the structure of a website influences users’ perception of it; how the colors and types used by its designer affect their mood; and how they interact with it to connect with others.
The psychological impact of the design of a website determines if users will trust it or not, if they will feel important, or at ease, or curious and so on. In short, it is the number one determinant of a good or bad web user experience, and regardless of whether you are new to web design or a seasoned professional, if you would like to understand how you can use its power, then this is the right course for you.
WHO THIS COURSE IS FOR
This course is useful for all web designers, to a great extent also app designers, independent of their level of expertise and years of experience, from individuals who are using readymade templates to publish their first personal conceptions, to highly professional designers who are creating original web interfaces for Fortune 500 companies. This course is very useful even for those content creators, who are not versed in web design at all, but wish to insert some content into an existing web-based platform in an impactful manner.
The course is especially beneficial for those who want to accomplish the creative part of designing a website, to then have a web developer do the coding; for those who use ready-made web templates that can be modified by users to quickly personalize them; and of course, for those who are already proficient in developing websites but who can use deeper design knowledge to make their creations more effective. If you are in this last category, this course can give you sound reasons for much of what is felt intuitively, and yet not fully understood.
HOW THIS COURSE WILL BENEFIT YOU
Website elements have become more or less standardized, so that by combining them within some context you can quickly end up with a fairly good-looking website. But the problem is, content and design are interrelated. Websites that are based on off-the-shelf themes by themselves cannot claim the kind of relationship that makes a website impactful, as a theme is always built on dummy content. This means that, in order to select content appropriate layouts, visuals, colors, typography etc., to create content that is scannable and shared more, to design user experiences that are gamified and personalized, you do have to master the way to influence the perception of your visitors, whether you design from scratch or use a template. In that sense, learning about psychology driven web design will enable you to:
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Understand why successful websites have been designed the way they have been;
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Evaluate why, in some context, a certain design generates positive emotions and thoughts while another leads to user frustration;
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Create designs that increase conversions by taking latest findings in applied psychology into account;
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Design websites that support the quirks, biases and defining features of the human mind;
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Design displays that support human visual perception and improve the user experience.
In a word, by the end of this course, you will be able to create better websites and be more successful at what you do.
MAIN LEARNING OBJECTIVES
PART 1
Learning to design with user focus, from goal setting, through user research, defining personas, creating scenarios, devising user journeys and user experiences, user motivations, all the way to information architecture, usability and usability testing, and accessibility issues.
Learning to take the characteristics and limitations of human attention, memory, perception, language and reading skills, learning abilities, and different types of emotions into consideration when designing a website.
Learning how to account for perceptual biases of users in order to create websites that are more appealing to their subconscious mind and easier for them to navigate, by understanding the gestalt principles of perception.
Learning to create perceptual organization using similarity and contrast, visual weights, visual directions, dominance, focal points, compositional hierarchy, flow and rhythm, compositional balance, proportion, whitespace and much more to achieve strong visual hierarchy, simplicity, unity, variety, and consistency in design.
Learning to use the impact of color on human psychology to convey specific feelings and messages in your designs.
PART 2
Learning to create content that is suitable for scanning, better legible and readable, more impactful, socially accepted, and shared more, which are essential skills for any blogger.
Learning to judge the purposefulness, appropriateness as well as psychological impact of visuals, multimedia, and typography by taking into consideration such issues as the psychological impact of faces and anthropomorphic forms on photographs, the attractiveness bias, the meanings of common shapes, the use of digital arts, infographics, iconic representation, the psychology of typography and much more.
Learning to take characteristics and differences of individual users, as well as subtle details relating to specific user groups, including culture, gender, age, etc. into account for creating personalized experiences that resonate differently with different psychological profiles, groups and communities.
Learning to take human time requirements, responsiveness of designs, conceptual models in interactions, the usability of controls into account, and to be able to design effective call-to-action buttons, effective forms, gamification, real-time technology and mobile user interactions.
Learning to account for the triune nature of the human mind, the inconsistency of the self, the psychology of trust, the psychology of choice, the psychology of decision making, the price and quality perception, the psychology of scarcity and urgency, the psychology of reciprocity and rewards, the effects of social validation, and more generally, for all idiosyncrasies of human psychology to be able to design e-commerce websites that convert.
PRERQUISITES
There are no prerequisites for this course. If you can browse the internet and know what menus, buttons and links are, you can follow all the lectures. No literacy in psychology is required as all necessary knowledge will be conveyed, in laymen’s terms. However, you must be able to understand English without needing subtitles.
THE LEVEL OF STUDY
This is a comprehensive course for students at all levels, from beginner to advanced, where every aspect of psychological influence in web design is dealt with in detail. It is not a quick, one-hour design tutorial, not a presentation of inspirational lists and certainly not a tool tutorial. While someone on their first project can easily follow the lectures, even a seasoned professional web designer can find here some inspiration in terms of psychological impact to improve their work.
The course consists of two parts, where PART 1 covers the Fundamentals and PART 2 covers Advanced Topics.
The curriculum of the course is completely original, meaning that it does not follow any one book written by a third party. However, the information contained in the over 800-page course script has been checked against 12 contemporary design / psychology books and over 600 pages of design / psychology blogs.
The summary of this course is being sold as a kindle book on Amazon. It is provided to all students of the course free of charge.
You will receive a valuable certificate that you can add to your CV when you finish this course.
THE TEACHING METHOD
This course contains a total of 160 video lectures, 80 in PART 1 and 80 in PART 2, with each lecture having a duration of approximately 15 minutes (some a few minutes longer, others a few minutes shorter). The lectures are organized in 10 coherent content sections, plus one introductory section and one conclusion section.
The second section of the course serves as an extended introduction, where the entire user focused web design process is explained from goal setting all the way to usability testing, so that someone with no experience in web design at all can, having studied this section, easily understand the later section. For more experienced designers, this section may appear to be superfluous, but should nevertheless serve to solidify the basis for later sections.
Sections three and four convey the fundamentals of cognitive psychology so far as required for designing impactful websites, with lots of illustrations and always in laymen’s terms. From the fifth section onwards, the lectures are heavily supported by exemplary websites, either screenshots or video captures, where concepts are discussed with the help of design examples.
At the end of each section, there is a quiz. However, due to the nature of the subject matter, the quizzes can only serve to reinforce what has been explained in the lectures rather than testing design knowledge. Your actual progress can only be attested to by yourself in the long run through the changes you will notice in your creations.
Everything you’ll learn in this course relates to creating effective and affective websites. But it is one thing to hear about concepts, yet another to actually implement them in design work. Even though a great many number of examples are shown in the lectures, mastery in design requires practicing and so you will have to do the real work more or less by yourself. There are 82 assignments that accompany the lectures to facilitate a more active learning experience, which are the secret ingredients to the success of learning psychology driven design.
All assignments are applicable on any one of 5 web design projects, based on imagined scenarios introduced in the fifth lecture. The assignments, if properly worked on, can take the student from an empty canvas to a finished web design project. In other words, a student applying all assignments on all 5 scenarios will end up with not one but five portfolio-ready website designs by the end of the course.
WHAT THIS COURSE IS NOT ABOUT
This course is NOT about learning web development using HTML / CSS / Scripting Languages. It is also NOT about encoding, implementing, or publishing an actual website on some platform. This course is about web design.
This is also NOT a psychology course. While a great number of topics are covered here that are usually taught within the curriculum of a psychology course, including advanced topics in neuroscience, the emphasis is always on practical design implications of these and NOT on theoretical notions of cognition or behavior.
Psychology driven design is NOT about the psychology of the designer or designers in a design team or their interactions with other project stakeholders or the design methods they may be employing. The focus here is always on the psychology of the website visitor.
Psychology driven design is also NOT about hacking people’s brains, or using techniques for manipulating their unconscious mind, or persuading them to buy things they don’t need. It is merely about using knowledge gained about the way human beings work for designing impactful websites, apps and more generally, web-based user experiences.
Psychology driven design is NOT the same thing as user-centered design. Nevertheless, even though this course is NOT particularly about teaching the standardized user-centered design methodology, or the design thinking concept, it touches upon many of the topics that are usually covered in those fields of study, but then goes way beyond.
The applicability of psychology driven design is NOT limited to creation of business websites. It is applicable to all types of websites, from personal blogs to virtual reality-based community forums.
IMPORTANT NOTE: This course also contains our courses “Gestalt Theory for Web/UX/UI/App Designers” and “Color Psychology for Web/UX/UI/App Designers”
IMPORTANT NOTE: WE DO NOT OFFER SUBTITLES IN THIS COURSE.
Course Curriculum
Chapter 1: Introduction
Lecture 1: Welcome to Psychology Driven Web Design
Lecture 2: Content and its Presentation on the Web
Lecture 3: A First Glimpse
Lecture 4: The Structure of the Course
Lecture 5: Assignment Projects
Chapter 2: Overview of the Web Design Process
Lecture 1: User Experience
Lecture 2: User Expectations
Lecture 3: Goal Alignment
Lecture 4: Target Audience and SMART Goals
Lecture 5: User Research
Lecture 6: User Maps
Lecture 7: Personas
Lecture 8: Motivations and the Hierarchy of Needs
Lecture 9: Information Architecture
Lecture 10: Overview of Website Elements
Lecture 11: Designing with Data
Lecture 12: Accessibility Issues
Lecture 13: Extrinsic Design Constraints
Lecture 14: Assessment of the User Experience
Lecture 15: Section Summary
Chapter 3: Cognitive Psychology for Web Design
Lecture 1: Introduction to Cognitive Psychology
Lecture 2: How the Brain Works
Lecture 3: The Triune Brain Model
Lecture 4: Attention
Lecture 5: Short-Term Memory
Lecture 6: Long-Term Memory
Lecture 7: Recognition versus Recall
Lecture 8: Visual Perception
Lecture 9: Visual Perception (Continued)
Lecture 10: Language and Reading
Lecture 11: Learning
Lecture 12: Emotions
Lecture 13: Emotions (Continued)
Lecture 14: Cognitive Biases
Lecture 15: Section Summary
Chapter 4: Gestalt Psychology for Web Design
Lecture 1: Introduction to Gestalt Psychology
Lecture 2: Emergence and Meaningfulness
Lecture 3: Conciseness and Invariance
Lecture 4: Symmetry
Lecture 5: Multistability and Figure / Ground Distinction
Lecture 6: Reification and Closure
Lecture 7: Continuity
Lecture 8: Grouping by Proximity
Lecture 9: Grouping by Similarity
Lecture 10: Grouping by Connectedness
Lecture 11: Grouping by Common Region
Lecture 12: Grouping by Common Fate
Lecture 13: Grouping by Synchrony
Lecture 14: 3D Vision
Lecture 15: Section Summary
Chapter 5: Visual Design Principles
Lecture 1: Introduction
Lecture 2: Unity, Variety and Simplicity in Design
Lecture 3: Consistency for Better Usability
Lecture 4: Similarity and Contrast
Lecture 5: Visual Weight
Lecture 6: Visual Direction
Lecture 7: Dominance and Focal Points
Lecture 8: Compositional Hierarchy, Flow and Rhythm
Lecture 9: Compositional Balance
Lecture 10: Whitespace as a Design Element
Lecture 11: Aesthetic Proportions
Lecture 12: Natural Focal Points and Axes
Lecture 13: Grid Systems
Lecture 14: Layout and Design Examples
Lecture 15: Section Summary
Chapter 6: Color Psychology for Web Design
Lecture 1: Introduction to Using Colors in Web Design
Lecture 2: Color Vision Revisited
Lecture 3: Color Harmony
Lecture 4: Introduction to Color Psychology
Lecture 5: Red and its Tints and Shades
Lecture 6: Yellow and Orange
Lecture 7: Green and Brown
Lecture 8: Blue and Purple
Lecture 9: Light Neutrals
Lecture 10: Dark Neutrals
Lecture 11: Choosing the Right Colors
Lecture 12: Using Colors in E-Commerce
Lecture 13: Website Examples
Lecture 14: Color Blindness
Lecture 15: Section Summary
Lecture 16: END OF PART 1: Recap and Outlook
Lecture 17: BONUS Lecture
Instructors
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Rating Distribution
- 1 stars: 2 votes
- 2 stars: 2 votes
- 3 stars: 17 votes
- 4 stars: 49 votes
- 5 stars: 97 votes
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