Sunday 21 January 2018

COP3 Synergy



This research project has aimed to discover the impact that colour has on user interfaces, its subsequent effect on user experience design, and the extent to which any found effects are valid. 

The written essay element of the project focused on the physio- and psychological effects of colour, including its potential effects on emotions, moods and physical conditions e.g. blood pressure, adrenaline release etc., as well as the degree to which these effects are ingrained (a product of evolution) or learned (a product of culture), including the theory of evolutionary aesthetics, and the cultural differences in the perception of individual colours; as well as the way corporations employ colour to create particular personalities or reinforce product identities. 

A desktop application was designed in lieu of a mobile-situated environment to ensure my personal skills are developed equally in all device scales. A weather site/desktop app was chosen as the practical piece because of the inherent emotional link that people have to the weather - if the sky is grey, or if it is raining, people's moods tend to be intrinsically worse than if the sky is bright and the sun is shining. In order to assess the emotional impact that colour can have on UI design, the interface was designed in three different colourways which all informed the user that it would be raining all day. One colourway was designed with a number of different greys and dark whites to try and exacerbate the negative impact of rain on people's moods, a blue variant was designed to try and make people feel more relaxed and calmed by the rain (akin to a mindfulness app), and an experimental gold variant was also created to explore if particular product identities; specifically that of luxurious, precious products, could be emulated just through the use of a colour. 

In user testing, 95% of users agreed that the blue variant had a ‘calming’ appearance, 76% agreed that the gold version had a ‘luxurious’ appearance, and 72% agreed that the grey version had a ‘melancholy’ appearance. 

Though the methods of gathering data were imperfect (e.g. lack of variation in age and cultural representation), the overwhelmingly consistent data gathered offers a clear and present corroboration of the hypotheses. 

Beyond this, a set of interesting outliers regarding the grey concept offered an intriguing insight into the different ways in which individuals perceive different colours. Though going against the hypotheses, it served to reinforce the profound and occasionally varying impact colour can have. 

Colour has a highly significant role to play in user interface design, and can have a profound impact on how users feel when they interact with a product or service, as well as helping to create visual cues and hierarchy in order to help guide the users through said product, service or system. 


Practical Response - Design Boards

Practical Response - Mockups









Contextualising user interface designs by displaying them in their intended environment helps users to envision exactly how it would look, rather than having to mentally convert a flat image in their head. It also aids the design process by testing if the concept, colours and layout actually work in-situ.

Practical Response - User Feedback and Psychological Response






One of my primary methods of psychological data collection was conducted on Instagram due to the ease of user response and the large range of ages and professions available to respond. Though there was a disparity in the quantity of responses between the different designs, an overwhelming majority of responses corroborated the hypothesis of each coloured design. 

Of the 43 testers questioned, 41 (95%) agreed that the blue variant had a ‘calming’ appearance. Of the 25 testers questioned, 19 agreed (76%) that the gold version had a ‘luxurious’ appearance. Of the 36 testers questioned, 26 (72%) agreed that the grey version had a ‘melancholy’ appearance. 

Interestingly, some users agreed with each other on separate, isolated test sessions that they actually found the grey design more calming than the blue; that it made them at peace with the idea that rain was imminent, whereas the blue design gave a negative spin. This is an interesting contrast with the hypothesis; though, in obvious contrast to the tendency of blue to be relaxing, ‘feeling blue’ is an expression used to denote a negative mood. 

Practical Response - A reminder of the point of this concept



The point of this practical piece, and the whole project in extension, is to explore and prove what impact colour has on user interface design, and the subsequent impact this has on the experience of users. 

A weather app is an effective medium to explore this because of the emotional connection humans have to different forms of weather. If colour can be utilised to mitigate the negativity people feel when they learn rain is imminent, or reinforce the positivity of a sunny day for example, then this is a great leap forward in the emotional aspect of user experience design. 

Practical Response - Final Designs and Additional Colours

The point of this project, and the designs themselves, is to explore and attempt to prove the impact that colour has on user interface design, and how people's emotional and physical response to colour has an impact on how users perceive the things they're interacting with. 


Gold

Intended to mimic the emotional response to high-class, luxury goods





Grey

Intended to create a sombre, melancholy emotional response






Blue

Intended to create a calming and relaxing emotional response 






Practical Response - The importance of iconography


A simple, easily interpretable set of icons is an undeniable asset for any user interface


Iconography helps to enhance the visual appearance, and helps users to interpret information more quickly - particularly for at-a-glance info like small weather widgets for upcoming days.

The use of icons can also help reinforce otherwise text-based user interactions; it helps the users realise that it's something they can use or touch 


Practical Response - Design Development Stage 2





The 'Rain' 

Though this background image was said to be visually appealing in feedback and user testing sessions, it was agreed that it carried too much inherent emotional impact itself, and so future versions had to have a more subtle, toned down image. 



Design Process Board 


Practical Response - Design Development Stage 1

Top-down hierarchy of information reinforces the natural left-to-right, up-to-down flow of the eye (akin to the Western method of reading), allowing users to naturally skim across the content rather than have to search out the information they want. 


A design trend in contemporary user interfaces is the utilisation of modular elements, similar to the fine art style De Stijl, also known as Neoplasticism or Mondrianism. It tends to involve the use of the entire available display with a widescreen aspect ratio, and either a bright and primary or muted and pastel colour system.

Though i
t's a well received visual style, and has inherent user experience advantages through its ability to create a clear cut sense of hierarchy and keep users interested with its smooth, attractive animations, its tendency as a style to use multiple colours doesn't fit well with the nature of the colour experiment. The design should only utilise one colour, or set of colours at a time, and so a more simple layout would be more appropriate. 

Clouds, diagrams, iconography or other visual elements should be kept to a minimum in order to reduce distraction from the colours.  








Saturday 20 January 2018

Practical Response - Sketching and Concept Development


Iconography is an important element in user interface design: 'Icons are an essential part of many user interfaces, visually expressing objects, actions and ideas. When done correctly, they communicate the core idea and intent of a product or action, and they bring a lot of nice benefits to user interfaces, such as saving screen real estate and enhancing aesthetic appeal. Last but not least, most apps and websites have icons. It’s a design pattern that is familiar to users' - Nick Babich,
https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2016/10/icons-as-part-of-a-great-user-experience/
. 



Wednesday 17 January 2018

Practical Response - Concept and Brief



Creating a multi-faceted user interface which shows weather information under a variety of different colour schemes will allow for the impact of colour on UI design to be assessed to some degree. Other than the colours, very few elements of the design should be changed. 

A large quantity of my recent projects have been focused on design for smartphones, and in order to develop my skills in cross-device UI design it'd be beneficial to design this interface for desktops. 

Tuesday 9 January 2018

How different cultures perceive the colour yellow

https://www.sapiens.org/language/color-perception/




Though there is a strong argument for the colour preferences of humans being evolutionary, there is also evidence to suggest that culture and society also has an impact. Colour is such an enormous spectrum, and humans are capable of seeing millions of them, but instead of attempting to name all of them as distinct colours we tend to categorise them into groups like blue and green. If you show people two very close shades of green they can tell that they are not the same, though they will still call both green - so confirmed by a study on four month old infants (Horizon: the EU Research & Innovation Magazine, 2018). 

As an example, the colour yellow, which is often seen as one of joy and happiness, has some surprisingly dark meanings in other cultures. In France and Germany yellow signifies ‘jealousy, betrayal, weakness and contradiction’. In the 10th century the French people even painted yellow the doors of traitors and criminals. In China it is associated with pornography, and the Chinese term ‘yellow picture’ or ‘yellow book’ is used to denote pornographic images and websites when mentioned in the media. 

Contrastingly, in Africa the colour yellow is reserved for high ranking nations because of its close resemblance to gold, which itself carries global associations with money and success. Egyptians also closely associate yellow with gold, though the practise of painting mummies with yellow paint has meant that the colour is now also a symbol for mourning in Egyptian culture. In Japan, yellow has been found to represent ‘bravery, wealth and refinement’ since the War of Dynasties in 1357, due to the adornment of yellow chrysanthemums by the warriors who fought in it and their representation of the emperor and royal family. Thai culture considers yellow to be a lucky colour, particularly for Monday, and it’s further considered to be an important shade because it represents the King of Thailand (who was born on a Monday). Many Thais wear yellow on Monday to pay tribute, and some schools even require the teaching staff to wear yellow during the first week of December (HuffPost, 2016). 


Though this may appear an arbitrary or whimsical group of observations, it is worth considering specific applications and the implication of them in order to contextualise their relevance to human-machine interaction and the psychological considerations of user experience design. Consider how the bank HSBC’s intrinsic use of the colour red has positive connotations in China, due to its association with luck and good finance. Then consider if their identity and online presence was instead overwhelmingly yellow, and what that could mean. Beyond any notwithstanding negatives of the colour yellow (such as a feeling of ‘cheapness’, a propensity to induce hunger, and a difficult contrast with other colours), the cultural link in China that yellow has to pornographic material could have a potentially adverse marketing impact.