Open AccessBook
Emotional design : why we love (or hate) everyday things
Donald A. Norman
- 01 Jan 2004
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors make the connection between our emotions and how we relate to ordinary objects, from juicers to Jaguars, and argue that design experts have vastly underestimated the role of emotion on our experience of everyday objects.
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Abstract: By the author of The Design of Everyday Things , the first book to make the connection between our emotions and how we relate to ordinary objects--from juicers to Jaguars. Did you ever wonder why cheap wine tastes better in fancy glasses? Why sales of Macintosh computers soared when Apple introduced the colorful iMac? New research on emotion and cognition has shown that attractive things really do work better, a fact fans of Don Norman's classic The Design of Everyday Things cannot afford to ignore.In recent years, the design community has focused on making products easier to use. But as Norman amply demonstrates in this fascinating and important new book, design experts have vastly underestimated the role of emotion on our experience of everyday objects. Emotional Design analyzes the profound influence of this deceptively simple idea, from our willingness to spend thousands of dollars on Gucci bags and Rolex watches to the impact of emotion on the everyday objects of tomorrow. In the future, will inanimate objects respond to human emotions? Is it possible to create emotional robots?Norman addresses these provocative questions--drawing on a wealth of examples and the latest scientific insights--in this bold exploration of the objects in our everyday world.
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Citations
•Dissertation
The Significance of Things : Affective User-Artefact Relations
Viktor Hjort af Ornäs
- 01 Jan 2010
TL;DR: This project has taken an exploratory qualitative approach, aiming to elucidate what it is that people find significant in experiences with products, by examining the role(s) they play in events, and the perceived impact the thing has on the person's ability to realise motives.
25
•Dissertation
Public policy, technology and lived experience : three case studies of technology in support of urban transport policies in London
Philip Inglesant
- 01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: In this article, a qualitative analysis based on Grounded Theory and Discourse Analysis is developed and used to illuminate the embodiedness of interactions with technology from an ecological perspective of affordances and genres.
25
iPads in the Technical Communication Classroom An Empirical Study of Technology Integration and Use
TL;DR: It is explained how a cartography of affect can be useful in demonstrating how technologies become imbued with meaning and significance in particular pedagog-ical contexts.
25
A Gendered Economy of Pleasure: Representions of Cars and Humans in Motoring Magazines
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse the cultural signification in the co-production of gender and technology, focusing on the popular genre of motoring magazines, and find that men's relationships with cars are premised on passion and pleasure while women are figured as rational and unable to attach emotionally to cars.
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