
What is Anchoring? | IxDF - The Interaction Design Foundation
3 days ago · What is Anchoring? Anchoring is a cognitive bias that occurs if someone presents information in a way that limits an audience’s range of thought/reference. To suggest values or …
What are Feedback Loops? | IxDF
Feedback loops are processes where designers use a system’s outputs as inputs to find cause-and-effect relationships within it.
What are UX Designers? | IxDF - The Interaction Design Foundation
User experience (UX) designers are professionals who create meaningful and user-centric digital experiences. They use design principles, psychology and research methodologies to make …
What is Confirmation Bias? | IxDF - The Interaction Design …
6 days ago · Confirmation bias is a psychological tendency to favor information or data that aligns with one’s preexisting beliefs, opinions or values.
How to Design Use Cases in UX | IxDF
What is a Use Case in UX? Use cases in UX (user experience) design are essential for continuous product discovery, where teams search and test ideas regarding the target …
IxDF Design Compendium: The world's biggest collection of …
2 days ago · Learn User Experience (UX) and Design from the world' s largest open-source design library.
Outcome Bias – Not All Outcomes are Created Equal
Dec 2, 2015 · Evaluating the outcomes of our actions makes sense. However, there is a cognitive bias where we place too much weight on the outcome and aren’t critical enough of the …
Loss Aversion – Really, What’s the Worst that Can Happen?
There’s a cognitive bias that makes us sadder to lose something than it makes us happy to gain it. This causes us to be afraid of loss – even when that fear is illogical.
What is Bias in Design? | IxDF
Bias is the way humans interpret and evaluate information according to how it' s presented or perceived through the lens of their values and beliefs.
14 Barriers to Ideation and How to Overcome Them | IxDF
Learn how to break innovation barriers—such as: inexperienced facilitation, unfriendly space, unclear goals, egos and hierarchy, etc—and run or participate in successful ideation sessions.