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posted by martyb on Monday February 11 2019, @03:00AM   Printer-friendly
from the designer-egomania-vs-user-ergonomics dept.

In a not so recent (2015) study Flat Design vs Traditional Design: Comparative Experimental Study scientists measure the performance of current and past interface styles. They reference multiple past articles and studies (some freely avaliable like Ref 3 or Ref 11) so they are not walking new ground, just measuring some more.

Some interesting background:

The density of screen information [in flat design] is often extraordinarily low [10].
...
The main criticism was that flat design ignores the three-dimensional nature of the human brain, which is extremely sensitive to visual cues linking interfaces to the real world. The removal of affordances from interactive interface objects means that users regularly perceive interactive elements as non-interactive, and non-interactive elements as interactive.
Despite these limitations flat design is becoming more and more common, and criticism of experts in HCI [Human-Computer Interaction] and usability is generally ignored by the software industry and graphic designers.

They used different tests: finding a word in text, finding an icon among others and finding clickable objects in a webpage. The process included eye tracking and recording of mouse motions. Subjects were students below 30 years old and already using similar interfaces, so effects in older or disabled persons were not studied. Font tests showed similar times, but worse cognitive load (derived from eye motions) for flat style. Icon tests showed worse times and mental load for flat style, a more complex task pushing the brain out of semiautomatic mode. Webpage tests were also against flat style, with high miss and false alarms indicators.

The conclusions were clear:

Our experimental study supports the opinion expressed by many HCI and usability experts that flat design is a harmful tendency in area of user interfaces, and should be replaced by interfaces based on the design principles developed over decades of research and practice of HCI and usability engineering.

Now we have more proofs that "flat design is inferior to traditional design", we aren't just whiny users opposed to change that don't understand what is going on. Based in personal experiences, and those of older persons around me, my conclusion is that any "UI/UX expert" that keeps parroting the modern interfaces is just a fad-following graphic designer at best (I expect more from those too... but they keep on disappointing me), and in any case should not be allowed into the HCI field. There were other studies, and this one is around 4 years old, so maybe it's time to get back into saner styles. Not that I hope things will improve quickly, after realizing that — since this study — things have slid more and more into simpleton mode.


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 11 2019, @04:39AM (3 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 11 2019, @04:39AM (#799381)

    Recently Google Image Search started to serve me a new style. Instead of results organized in lines, with preview opening a new horizontal block, it now shows multiple columns of different height items and the preview on the side and sticky, leaving less columns as scrollable. With first click it even had to "reload" (white flash) and rearrange everything. And again if you close that panel. Bang, white flash to the face over and over, with high CPU load, if you want to have more results in view again. Use of tabs for previews becomes a must, not an option.

    So for something you are supposed to scan side to side, then next line, it became a game follow the shaky lines up and down. That or we are supposed to scan one column all the way down, then go back to top and scan the next. It reminded me of something, and confirmed it, same layout than Pinterest (which I avoid as much as possible). I even tried to resize the window to make it single column, like if I had a spyphone, but now way, it gets horizontal scrolling with 4 columns minimum in GIS and 2 in P. Retarded in all cases.

    The end of scourge design is not near. *sigh*

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  • (Score: 2) by c0lo on Monday February 11 2019, @08:49AM (1 child)

    by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Monday February 11 2019, @08:49AM (#799445) Journal

    The end of scourge design is not near. *sigh*

    Yes, it can be much worse before it gets better. A pity we won't get to the better times

    --
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford
    • (Score: 4, Funny) by cmdrklarg on Monday February 11 2019, @07:00PM

      by cmdrklarg (5048) Subscriber Badge on Monday February 11 2019, @07:00PM (#799686)

      Erhman's Commentary: "Things will get worse before they will get better? Who said things would get better?"

      --
      The world is full of kings and queens who blind your eyes and steal your dreams.
  • (Score: 2) by Hyper on Monday February 11 2019, @01:39PM

    by Hyper (1525) on Monday February 11 2019, @01:39PM (#799495) Journal

    https://duckduckgo.com/?ko=-1&q=soylent+green&ia=images&iax=images [duckduckgo.com]

    Have you tried duckduckgo? It's like Google used to be. Simple, straight forward, trustworthy.

    I appreciate what Google has done for the Internet. For a while now I have strongly suspected that they have lost the plot. It started with Gmail. When they screwed with the interface too much - something about emails should be only short and floating and attachments should be hard to view - I left. Since then I have not looked back. Their captcha and need to serve every single javascript library they can blows but that's a small thing in the scheme of things. Give ddg a try?