GreydUX

UX at your Fingertips

GreydUX

UX at your Fingertips

Enclothed cognition and Wireframing tools

For me, new programs, and new gadgets are like presents wrapped in shiny paper under the Christmas tree. I can’t wait to put my hands on them, and start playing with them. In the last year, I have tried Axure, Justinmind, Balsamiq, Mockups, etc.

I ended up using the sketch-look of Balsamiq the most often, even though I was told it lacked that professional look. It looks sketchy …. and that’s exactly what liberates me. The smooth look of other tools makes the wireframe “finished”, polished, and, may I say, untouchable in the sense of a marble statue. It is finished, no need to change. Whereas I like to think of design (even wireframe design) as a work in progress – there is always room for experimentation, re-thinking, re-tooling. Wireframes are more thinking tools than deliverables for me at this point. Once developers take over, it becomes a deliverable and will lose its sketchiness.

doctor with stethoscopeA plethora of studies prove that external props go far in affecting how we think. A study published by Hajo and Galinsky in 2012 showed that when college students dressed up in doctor’s smocks, they performed significantly better and increased their attention than a group of students dressed in identical smocks but described as painter’s clothing. The “borrowed” identity of a medical doctor made them take on the qualities of intelligence. Props and tools go a long way influencing our mental behavior.

Enclothed cognition and Wireframing tools

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