#and there's nothing else going on between the neurons atm
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Goodmorning kiss... ⥠what's with me and kissy narumitsu sketches lately...?
#ace attorney#narumitsu#phoenix wright#miles edgeworth#wrightworth#periwinkla#fanart#these past few days I'm just sketching kisses inbetween other more complex stuff#mostly when I don't have the brains to work on more complex things#like today hahaha#I really don't feel like I have the brains today pft#like it's just a narumitsu kissy mush up there#and there's nothing else going on between the neurons atm
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How great design actually makes things work better
Weâve been told âitâs whatâs on the inside that counts,â but what if thatâs not completely true? What if the outside counts, too? What if you can judge a book by its cover and what if beauty is much, much more than skin-deep?
If you put the pieces together from various studies on neurology, psychology, usability and even human evolution, youâll see the true value of appearancesâthe one the fairy tales donât want you to see.
Design is more than just pretty packaging. Itâs actually one of the main influences on how we perceive value (sometimes even more than whatâs actually under the hood). And weâve got the science to prove it.
Setting your sight high â
No matter how much you love smooth jazz, itâs what you see that occupies most of your brainâs timeâmore than all your other senses combined.
While no one has managed to pinpoint an exact number, high estimates say visuals account for 83% of the perceptual data in our brains. Even the lowest estimates cite that over 50% of the surface area of the brain is devoted to processing visual information. Do the math, and you see more neurons are devoted to sight than hearing, taste, touch and smell combined. That must explain why weâre six times more likely to remember something with visuals than without.
I donât know what Polpas are or what they taste like, but I want to buy some. (Product packaging design by Martis Lupus.)
So what does this mean for design? The graphics you create are going to dominate the viewerâs brain activity far more than anything else. If a shopper is holding a product in their hands, the packaging is going to have a much greater impact on their decision to buy than, say, how it feels or what it smells like.
And (weâll get into this later) our sense of sight can even overpower over our logic. In other words, a well-designed logo can influence peopleâs perception of a brand more than the companyâs financial report or even a news scandal.
For now, just remember that the human brain is wired for sight.
How millions of years of tiger attacks helped modern design â
Believe it or not, under the right circumstances, visuals can override rational thinking. Itâs not a stretch to say that people (some more than others) make decisions emotionally rather than logically. Visuals provide a shortcut to âgutâ reactions, so what you see often holds more weight than what you think.
Don Norman, scholar and director at The Design Lab, writes in Emotion & Design: Attractive Things Work Better that our reliance on visual stimuli over rational thought was more of an evolutionary necessity.
Letâs put it this way. Youâre a primitive, cave-dwelling human and youâre out strolling through the jungle when you see a tiger. You could calculate how far away the tiger is, scan the grounds for a suitable hiding space or find a rock to defend yourself with⊠But these all take precious moments in which the tiger would pounce and eat you.
Instead you could simply just run. Sure, itâs not a foolproof plan, but in primitive times, survival favored fast thinking over effective thinking.
So over the millennia, humans evolved to make âgutâ decisions based on what they saw to save time. At first, the link between eyesight and emotional response was based on the strongest of motivators: fear. If you saw a tiger, you ran. If you peered over a high cliff, you stepped back.
Over time, visuals permeated into other emotions. The sight of a loved one made you happy. Or the familiar image of home made you relax. Keep in mind, this was in an era when language was still developing, so feelings were more instinctual than anything else.
Flash forward to modern times. Tiger attacks may have stopped, but our emotional gut reactions remain. And that has a huge impact on graphic design.
Take a look at this logo:
Logo design for Seven More Days by Vespertilio
If we told you that Seven More Days was a daycare center, would you believe us? Even if we showed you undeniable proof, youâd still have a hard time swallowing it. Thatâs because, when what you see comes into conflict with other information, your mind tends to lean towards what you see.
(Seven More Days is a rock band, by the way.)
Though it stemmed from evolutionary purposes, our blind faith in visuals serves goals like marketing, branding, sales and, as weâll explain later, actual usability of a product.
The firstâand onlyâimpression â
If youâve ever broken your jeans button, and then trip while walking out of the bathroom, and then your pants fall down because they got caught on a table edge, all a few minutes after meeting your girlfriendâs parents, then you know how damning a bad first impression can be.
But what you may not know is how much of first impressions depend on looksâor how long they truly last.
While much has been said about the science of first impressions, the general consensus is that, at first glance, people assess trustworthiness and competence above all else. This applies to brands, books and products just as much as it does to people, though you canât hire a designer to improve peopleâs first impression of your personality.
Logo design by gaga vastard
In human interactions, first impressions are formed largely by nonverbal cues such as facial expressions, grooming and body language (although what people say plays a big part, too). For businesses, they come from brand visuals like logos, websites and product packaging. In other words, graphic design.
Even more significant is how long first impressions last, even despite conflicting evidence. In a Cornell study, researchers showed subjects photographs of people and found that they held on to first-impression judgements of those people up to six months later, even after meeting them and people and seeing that theyâre nothing like the photograph.
More bad news, these initial impressions are formed after just 60 seconds â harkening back to the evolutionary development of eyesight in making gut decisions.
Why does this matter? Well itâs definitely incentive to get your branding and marketing designs right the first time instead of redoing a bad design later.
Choose a design that conveys trust and competence using visuals instead of words. It should be simple enough to understand in a few seconds, but memorable enough to last months or even years.
The parable of the ugly ATM â
After everything weâve just discussed, would it surprise you to know that a good visual design can actually make a product work better? Thatâs a bit misleading, but in 1995, a pair of Japanese scientists discovered that graphic design can make people think a product works better.
Two researchers tested a variety of different screen layouts on an ATM, and then later had subjects rate both how it worked and how it looked. In total, they tested 26 layouts ranging from technically efficient but ugly, to aesthetically pleasing but inefficientâand varying degrees in between.
Sample layouts from the ATM experiment
Somewhat surprisingly, the results showed indisputably that better-looking layouts scored higher in usability. What designers can take from this is that great design can actually improve how the product is used or how a brandâs performance is perceived. A good book cover may not be able to save a bad book, but it can make a good book even better!
How does it work? Attractive designs cause pleasure, and the biological response of that pleasure is relaxation. A relaxed brain actually functions better, like improving problem-solving and motor skills. Thatâs why athletes try to relax before a big game instead of intentionally stressing themselves out.
Just look at how YouTube has improved their user experience just by improving the visual design:
Just by improving the design, YouTube manages to make its site more and more fun for users without changing the content too drastically (the navigation menu remains a left sidebar with rows of videos to the right). Via The Verge.
A good design improves brain function. It makes products easier to use, it makes companies seem better or more valuable, it makes people want to engage more with whatever the design is attached too.
Of course, this goes both ways. An unpleasing design causes anxiety, which complicated cognitive processes, which makes the user more likely to err or associate negative feelings with the design.
Itâs also worth noting that what makes people happy changes periodically with new design trends. The feeling of something ânewâ and âcutting edgeâ is sure to excite its users, so keeping up-to-date with what kind of visuals people want is just one of the many responsibilities of a good designer.
The ugly duckling was bad design. That swan upgrade was a necessary improvement. â
Design matters. It does more than just look good; it enhances the complete user experience, feeding into empirical business metrics by reducing product returns, increasing brand loyalty, making it more likely for customers to leave reviews and above all maximizing profits.
All that from a pretty picture.
Need something great designed?
Weâve got a world of designers that can help
Letâs go!
The post How great design actually makes things work better appeared first on 99designs.
How great design actually makes things work better published first on https://www.lilpackaging.com/
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Text
How great design actually makes things work better
Weâve been told âitâs whatâs on the inside that counts,â but what if thatâs not completely true? What if the outside counts, too? What if you can judge a book by its cover and what if beauty is much, much more than skin-deep?
If you put the pieces together from various studies on neurology, psychology, usability and even human evolution, youâll see the true value of appearancesâthe one the fairy tales donât want you to see.

Design is more than just pretty packaging. Itâs actually one of the main influences on how we perceive value (sometimes even more than whatâs actually under the hood). And weâve got the science to prove it.
Setting your sight high â
No matter how much you love smooth jazz, itâs what you see that occupies most of your brainâs timeâmore than all your other senses combined.
While no one has managed to pinpoint an exact number, high estimates say visuals account for 83% of the perceptual data in our brains. Even the lowest estimates cite that over 50% of the surface area of the brain is devoted to processing visual information. Do the math, and you see more neurons are devoted to sight than hearing, taste, touch and smell combined. That must explain why weâre six times more likely to remember something with visuals than without.
I donât know what Polpas are or what they taste like, but I want to buy some. (Product packaging design by Martis Lupus.)
So what does this mean for design? The graphics you create are going to dominate the viewerâs brain activity far more than anything else. If a shopper is holding a product in their hands, the packaging is going to have a much greater impact on their decision to buy than, say, how it feels or what it smells like.
And (weâll get into this later) our sense of sight can even overpower over our logic. In other words, a well-designed logo can influence peopleâs perception of a brand more than the companyâs financial report or even a news scandal.
For now, just remember that the human brain is wired for sight.
How millions of years of tiger attacks helped modern design â
Believe it or not, under the right circumstances, visuals can override rational thinking. Itâs not a stretch to say that people (some more than others) make decisions emotionally rather than logically. Visuals provide a shortcut to âgutâ reactions, so what you see often holds more weight than what you think.
Don Norman, scholar and director at The Design Lab, writes in Emotion & Design: Attractive Things Work Better that our reliance on visual stimuli over rational thought was more of an evolutionary necessity.
Letâs put it this way. Youâre a primitive, cave-dwelling human and youâre out strolling through the jungle when you see a tiger. You could calculate how far away the tiger is, scan the grounds for a suitable hiding space or find a rock to defend yourself with⊠But these all take precious moments in which the tiger would pounce and eat you.
Instead you could simply just run. Sure, itâs not a foolproof plan, but in primitive times, survival favored fast thinking over effective thinking.
So over the millennia, humans evolved to make âgutâ decisions based on what they saw to save time. At first, the link between eyesight and emotional response was based on the strongest of motivators: fear. If you saw a tiger, you ran. If you peered over a high cliff, you stepped back.
Over time, visuals permeated into other emotions. The sight of a loved one made you happy. Or the familiar image of home made you relax. Keep in mind, this was in an era when language was still developing, so feelings were more instinctual than anything else.
Flash forward to modern times. Tiger attacks may have stopped, but our emotional gut reactions remain. And that has a huge impact on graphic design.
Take a look at this logo:
Logo design for Seven More Days by Vespertilio
If we told you that Seven More Days was a daycare center, would you believe us? Even if we showed you undeniable proof, youâd still have a hard time swallowing it. Thatâs because, when what you see comes into conflict with other information, your mind tends to lean towards what you see.
(Seven More Days is a rock band, by the way.)
Though it stemmed from evolutionary purposes, our blind faith in visuals serves goals like marketing, branding, sales and, as weâll explain later, actual usability of a product.
The firstâand onlyâimpression â
If youâve ever broken your jeans button, and then trip while walking out of the bathroom, and then your pants fall down because they got caught on a table edge, all a few minutes after meeting your girlfriendâs parents, then you know how damning a bad first impression can be.
But what you may not know is how much of first impressions depend on looksâor how long they truly last.
While much has been said about the science of first impressions, the general consensus is that, at first glance, people assess trustworthiness and competence above all else. This applies to brands, books and products just as much as it does to people, though you canât hire a designer to improve peopleâs first impression of your personality.
Logo design by gaga vastard
In human interactions, first impressions are formed largely by nonverbal cues such as facial expressions, grooming and body language (although what people say plays a big part, too). For businesses, they come from brand visuals like logos, websites and product packaging. In other words, graphic design.
Even more significant is how long first impressions last, even despite conflicting evidence. In a Cornell study, researchers showed subjects photographs of people and found that they held on to first-impression judgements of those people up to six months later, even after meeting them and people and seeing that theyâre nothing like the photograph.
More bad news, these initial impressions are formed after just 60 seconds â harkening back to the evolutionary development of eyesight in making gut decisions.
Why does this matter? Well itâs definitely incentive to get your branding and marketing designs right the first time instead of redoing a bad design later.
Choose a design that conveys trust and competence using visuals instead of words. It should be simple enough to understand in a few seconds, but memorable enough to last months or even years.
The parable of the ugly ATM â
After everything weâve just discussed, would it surprise you to know that a good visual design can actually make a product work better? Thatâs a bit misleading, but in 1995, a pair of Japanese scientists discovered that graphic design can make people think a product works better.
Two researchers tested a variety of different screen layouts on an ATM, and then later had subjects rate both how it worked and how it looked. In total, they tested 26 layouts ranging from technically efficient but ugly, to aesthetically pleasing but inefficientâand varying degrees in between.
Sample layouts from the ATM experiment
Somewhat surprisingly, the results showed indisputably that better-looking layouts scored higher in usability. What designers can take from this is that great design can actually improve how the product is used or how a brandâs performance is perceived. A good book cover may not be able to save a bad book, but it can make a good book even better!
How does it work? Attractive designs cause pleasure, and the biological response of that pleasure is relaxation. A relaxed brain actually functions better, like improving problem-solving and motor skills. Thatâs why athletes try to relax before a big game instead of intentionally stressing themselves out.
Just look at how YouTube has improved their user experience just by improving the visual design:
Just by improving the design, YouTube manages to make its site more and more fun for users without changing the content too drastically (the navigation menu remains a left sidebar with rows of videos to the right). Via The Verge.
A good design improves brain function. It makes products easier to use, it makes companies seem better or more valuable, it makes people want to engage more with whatever the design is attached too.
Of course, this goes both ways. An unpleasing design causes anxiety, which complicated cognitive processes, which makes the user more likely to err or associate negative feelings with the design.
Itâs also worth noting that what makes people happy changes periodically with new design trends. The feeling of something ânewâ and âcutting edgeâ is sure to excite its users, so keeping up-to-date with what kind of visuals people want is just one of the many responsibilities of a good designer.
The ugly duckling was bad design. That swan upgrade was a necessary improvement. â
Design matters. It does more than just look good; it enhances the complete user experience, feeding into empirical business metrics by reducing product returns, increasing brand loyalty, making it more likely for customers to leave reviews and above all maximizing profits.
All that from a pretty picture.
Need something great designed?
We've got a world of designers that can help
Let's go!
The post How great design actually makes things work better appeared first on 99designs.
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