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Emotional Design: Why We Love (or Hate) Everyday Things | 
enlarge | Manufacturer: Basic Books Category: EBooks
List Price: $15.95 Buy New: $9.99 You Save: $5.96 (37%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 30 reviews Sales Rank: 1787
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 257
Dewey Decimal Number: 745.2019 ASIN: B0010NXJG8
Publication Date: May 10, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description
Did you ever wonder why cheap wine tastes better in fancy glasses? Why sales of Macintosh computers soared when Apple introduced the colorful iMac? New research on emotion and cognition has shown that attractive things really do work better, a fact fans of Don Norman's classic The Design of Everyday Things cannot afford to ignore.In recent years, the design community has focused on making products easier to use. But as Norman amply demonstrates in this fascinating and important new book, design experts have vastly underestimated the role of emotion on our experience of everyday objects.Emotional Design analyzes the profound influence of this deceptively simple idea, from our willingness to spend thousands of dollars on Gucci bags and Rolex watches to the impact of emotion on the everyday objects of tomorrow. In the future, will inanimate objects respond to human emotions? Is it possible to create emotional robots?Norman addresses these provocative questions--drawing on a wealth of examples and the latest scientific insights--in this bold exploration of the objects in our everyday world.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 25 more reviews...
good but not fun August 16, 2008 I really like this topic, but i found the book a little hard to read because some parts can be boring.
It's a good book
A good read but it won't change how you think about design March 29, 2008 I really enjoyed the first part of the book. It is a good read as the Design of everyday things was (which is a must), with great examples and stories.
The concepts in this book are quite simple and the book becomes a bit repetitive after a while. Having said that, I would recommend the book if you are a designer or if you closely work with designers.
(The last quarter of the book is about emotional machines and robots and less about design. These I simply skipped.)
excellent! March 26, 2008 What can I say... It's a superbly written book. Complete. I couldnt stop reading it once I began. Helped me out a lot in my work. (interaction design)
a straightforward argument for considering the human in human-centered design March 25, 2008 In "Emotional Design" cognitive psychologist Donald Norman provides an answer to his earlier 1980s book "The Design of Everyday Things," in which he focused exclusively on the primacy of functionalism and usability in product design. Here Norman updates his argument, addressing emotion as an equally important quality of meaningful and effective design. In fact, Norman now argues that the emotional side of design may be more critical to a product's success than its practical (or cognitive) elements. He outlines three different elements that come to play in all design (with emotion and cognition interacting at each level): visceral (an immediate reaction based on appearance), behavioral (a relationship based on pleasure/effectiveness with repeated interaction), and reflective (the contemplative side based on interpretation/intellectualization). By analyzing such topics as souvenir significance, emotional branding, iterative product testing, customer service, anthropomorphism, and even robot ethics, Norman establishes that fun, seduction, and fulfillment should be seriously considered in user-oriented design to produce objects that are more than just possessions. The book is extremely accessible and would be useful to anyone interested in human-object interaction, design thinking, product marketing, and even design ethics.
An interesting view about how products can change our lives September 30, 2007 Don Norman with this books exposes a review based on how products can make us feel better, and how they can influence our daily life in different contexts of use. If you're lookin' for a tutorial about "how make an emotional product", this is not the choice. Nevertheless, you'll never find it eather. Norman only puts a name to a phenomenon that already exists, but in a entertaining way that offer to the reader a new form to understand the design of products. It is worth it to read this, absolutely recommended.
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