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Designing Powerful Visuals for Engaging Learning

Designing Powerful Visuals for Engaging Learning

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Mike Taylor

July 31, 2024
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  1. Our unconscious mind can form likes or dislikes before the

    conscious mind even knows what is being responded to.
  2. What we see, hear, feel, or experience in our first

    encounter with something colors how we process the rest of it. https://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/headlines-change-way-think
  3. Our automatic, subconscious reaction to a design influences how we

    perceive its relevance, credibility, and even usability.
  4. Marketers speak to the Lizard Brain 1 System 1 operates

    largely unconsciously and automatically System 2 requires conscious effort and control
  5. Size of your thumbnail at arm’s length By the time

    you get to 5° away visual acuity drops 50%
  6. Inattentional blindness: Our intuition is that we will notice something

    that's that visible, that's that distinctive, and that intuition is consistently wrong. – Daniel Simons Invisible Gorilla
  7. You are not even seeing most of what’s going on

    in the universe. Abhijit Naskar, Neuroscientist
  8. SUBCONSCIOUS MIND Supercomputer loaded with a database of programmed behaviors

    https://www.brucelipton.com/resource/interview/romp-through-the-quantum-field
  9. "How do I get into that 40 bits of consciously

    considered information?" "How do I direct foveal vision where I want it to go?"
  10. 1 Movement 2 Focus 3 Difference 4 Brighter 5 Bigger

    6 What’s in front 6 Priorities for Visual Attention
  11. Movement Human Faces Stories There’s a Special Part of the

    Brain for Recognizing Faces Nancy Kanwisher (1997)
  12. Visual Hierarchy Organize and arrange visual elements in order of

    importance. It guides the viewer's attention to the most crucial information first, then to secondary elements, and so on.
  13. Rule of Thirds Place key elements where imaginary lines dividing

    the image into thirds intersect. This creates a more engaging composition that naturally guides the viewer's eye.
  14. Simplify: Remove unnecessary details White Space: Balance elements, avoid clutter

    Signaling: Use arrows, bold, color-coding Human Faces: Draw attention, guide focus Six Priorities: Movement, focus, contrast, brightness, size, proximity Visual Hierarchy: Use size, color, contrast for importance Rule of Thirds: Place key elements at grid intersections Grids: Create structured layouts
  15. Cognitive neuroscientist Carmen Simon reveals how to use brain science

    to attract attention, influencing memory and decisions Carmen Simon linkedin.com/in/drcarmensimon
  16. Connie Malamed’s book empowers designers to enhance understanding and interest

    through effective visual design for instructional materials. Connie Malamed linkedin.com/in/conniemalamed
  17. Improve eLearning effectiveness with evidence-based design principles and practical guidance

    based on Richard Mayer’s research on multimedia learning.