Understanding Emotional Design
“Everything has a personality: everything sends an emotional signal. So even where this was not the designer's intention, the people who view the website infer personalities and experience emotions.”
— Don Norman, Grand Old Man of User Experience
What role does emotion play in design? Why are we attracted to some designs and not others? How do we experience everyday products, and how can our experiences be improved? These are the kinds of questions Don Norman, director of The Design Lab at the University of California, asked when he first came up with the idea of “Emotional Design.”He was trying to understand the cognitive responses when we design and how we can learn to design emotional interfaces that anticipate and accommodate users’ needs. It’s a fascinating concept that deserves a bit of exploration.
What is Emotional Design?
Emotional design is creating designs that evoke emotions that cause positive user experiences. In 2003, leading researcher and design expert Don Norman published a book titled?‘Emotional Design: Why We Love (or Hate) Everyday Things.?The book explored the concept of designers creating products, brands,, and other things which aim to reach users on three cognitive levels:
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Professor Norman was enamored with the idea that everything and anything sends an emotional signal. Therefore designers should go about their work to reach users on these three cognitive levels if they want users to develop positive associations with their product, brand, or design.
When you design, it is essential to address all three levels of cognitive response:
How can we design emotional interfaces??
The next step is to start creating. The concept of emotional design can apply to a wide variety of products, services, and brands. As a result, the process of implementing this concept will differ from one design to another.
The first step in many workflows should be learning as much as you can about your audience, user, or customer. After all, it is their emotions that you are aiming to anticipate and accommodate for. Once you have some idea about the user, you can start to experiment: this is the fun part.
Here are a few things to consider when applying emotional design to your creative process:
“Positive experiences drive curiosity. They help motivate us to grow as individuals. [and] the fact is that the emotional design of a product or service affects its success—and thus the bottom line.”?(InteractionDesign) Therefore, knowing how to harness this information about the emotional connection is essential to help inform the designs we create daily.
The three levels or aspects of the emotional system are interlinked. Each can be stimulated in different ways, but all contribute to how we experience and respond to designs. Professor Norman’s concept of?Emotional Design?is a valuable way to understand and refine the creative process and should aid in creating innovative designs.
How do you create designs that connect with users? Learn about the concept of?Emotional Design?and how it can be used to anticipate and accommodate the needs and responses of your users.?Then, get in touch with our UX experts to learn more about emotional design and how our design process works here at Radiant.?
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