UI/UX QUESTIONS WITH 100% CORRECT ANSWERSD | VERIFIED
A broad term that includes several disciplines that study the effect of design on the ease of use and level of satisfaction with a product, site or system. - Answer-User Experience (UX) Designing software products and systems to be useful to a set of end users. It is a broad concept applied during the design process. Covers the technical use of a product or service and its essential physical interface. - Answer-User Experience Design (UXD) The feelings of a customer generated by his or her interactions with a supplier's employees, systems, channels or products. - Answer-Customer Experience What the user sees. This can be a set of commands or menus through which a user communicates with a program. It is also the space where interactions between humans and machines occurs. - Answer-User Interface (UI), or Graphical User Interface (GUI) The study of how a user interacts with a page, application or product. IXD facilitates the actions we want to take with any given system. - Answer-Interaction Design (IXD) The theory that users will abandon a website if they are unable to complete their task within 3 mouse clicks. - Answer-3-click Rule A technique that involves showing users a single content page for a quick 5 seconds to gather their initial impressions. Users make important judgments in the first moments when they visit a page. It gives the team insight into essential information about the page. - Answer-5-Second Test Users often read Web pages in an F-shaped pattered: two horizontal stripes, followed by by a vertical stripe. In a few seconds, thier eyes will move at amazing speed across your website's words in a one-ofa-kind pattern - Answer-F-Shaped Pattern a drawing which designers use to propose. explore, refine and communicate ideas . As a UX designer, you too can use sketching as your first line of attack to crack a design problem - Answer-Sketchinga simplified sketch of the information on a page. Also known as page architecture, page schematic, or a blueprint. It's a skeleton of the design and should contain all the important elements of the final product. - Answer-Wireframe A medium or highly detailed static representation of the design. A good mockup demonstrates the information structure, content and basic functionality in static form. Mockups make it easy to perceive the idea of the final product, and the process of mockup creation is less time-consuming compared to prototypes. - Answer-Mockup Often confused with a wireframe, a prototype is a medium or a highly detailed representation of the final product. It simulates user interaction with the interface. It should allow the user to rate the content and interface and test the primary options for communication with the app. It may not look exactly like the final product, but it definitely should not be sketched in shades of gray. Interactions must be modeled in a way that closely mimic the final product. - Answer-Prototype 20% of the functionality and features in any environment will be responsible for 80% of the actions taken within that environment. This is Pareto principle as applied to any website, web app or software environment. - Answer-80/20 Rule Determining which of two alternatives is preferred by the target audience. - Answer-A/B Testing The measure of a web page's usability by persons with one or more disabilities. - Answer-Accessibility A mathematical ratio with origins in ancient Greece, also known as the Greek letter Phi. It is found in nature, and has made its way into graphic and print design as people deem it to be the most visually appealing layout to the human eye. approximately equals 1.618. We find it when we divide a line into two parts so that the full length divided by the long part is equal to the long part divided by the short part. - Answer-Golden Ratio A system of horizontal and vertical lines providing a structural basis for page layout and design. It communicates order, economy and consistency. The grid provides a common structure and flexibility for organizing content. - Answer-Grid The ubiquitous text that turns up in tiny chunks on a webpage or in an application when you need it. It can be the label on a field, a quick set of instructions on what button to push, etc. It's the tiny text onwhich much of the product's UX hinges. Micro-copy provides those just-in-time clear instructions. - Answer-Micro-copy A timeless decorating rule that can help you put a color scheme together easily. Give balance to the colors used in any space. - Answer-60-30-10 Rule The difference between two colors. Black and white create the highest contrast possible. Colors can contrast in hue, value and saturation. You usually want a high contrast between text and its background color. But too high contrast between design elements might give an unsettled and messy impression. Effective use of contrast is the essential ingredient that makes the content accessible to every viewer. - Answer-Color Contrast This circle shows the relationships between primary colors, secondary colors and tertiary colors. Artists and designers use red, yellow, and blue primaries arranged at three equally spaced points around their color wheel. - Answer-Color Wheel An official corporate document that explains the brand's identity and presents brand standards. Besides the design aspect, brand books may include a company overview and communication guidelines as well. - Answer-Brand Book Defines how your company's brand, image and messaging are delivered to the public and particularly to your key audiences. positions the company, no matter how big or small. The rules for consistent typography, color use, and logo placement are all laid out in the corporate identity manual. - AnswerCorporate Identity Guideline The measurement, collection, and analysis of the internet to understand and optimize web usage. - Answer-Web Analytics Understand how a typical user views a given set of items. Designers write items on individual paper cards, and then ask users to group together similar cards. Card sorting helps to create websites that are easy to navigate. - Answer-Card Sorting Method People do not visually perceive items in isolation, but as part of a larger whole. These principles account for human tendencies towards similarity, proximity, continuity, and closure. - Answer-Gestalt PrinciplesA way to measure the density of a print or video image. The number of differently colored dots that can fit into a one-inch space provides information about the resolution of an image. If an image is not of adequately high quality, it may not be able to be resized or printed without a loss of resolution. - Answer-Dots Per Inch (DPI) A form of Web analytics.Tracking and analysis of visits to websites. This analysis reports user behavior such as routing, stickiness, where users come from and where they go from the site. - AnswerClickstream Analysis A product with enough features to meet the needs of early customers. This strategy provides feedback for future product development. - Answer-Minimum Viable Product (MVP) A diagram used to visually organize information. A hierarchical and shows the relationships among the parts of the whole. It is often created around a single concept to which associated images, words and parts of words are added. Major ideas are connected directly to the central concept, and other ideas branch out from those. - Answer-Mindmap
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- 11 avril 2024
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