Certificate 5/7 – #GoogleUXDesign Professional Certificate program. #UX #ProductDesign
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“Conduct UX Research and Test Early Concepts”Was not so easy compared to other courses in the series, but completely worth it.Certificate 4/7 – #GoogleUXDesign Professional Certificate program. #UX #ProductDesign
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Ref: https://ux.stackexchange.com/questions/115468/what-the-difference-between-the-2-menu-icons-3-dots-kebab-and-3-lines-hambur
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Similarity: Elements that look similar are perceived to have the same function. Proximity: Elements that are close together appear to be more related than elements that are spaced farther apart. Common Region: Elements located within the same area are perceived to be grouped together. Closure: Humans subconsciously ‘complete’ the ‘incomplete’ objects or scenarios they see or perceive Continuity: Elements that are in same line, or curve are related (there are more…)
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View my achievement here – https://coursera.org/share/2a76acacc545200340a2a959670ec002
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View my achievement from Google on Coursera – https://www.coursera.org/account/accomplishments/certificate/WNENVHT8TCQQ
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Confirmation bias :- Your prior (vague) knowledge or beliefs influence your judgement. You think you know this already. because of preconception False consensus bias :- Believing your own choice as a choice of group. Overestimating that a large number of people will agree to your judgement Recency bias :- You subconsciously believe that the most recently/last heard/discussed idea is the best Primacy bias :- You tend to believe/recall what you heard first (may be from a first speaker) is the best. You don’t remember or don’t care what later said because the first speaker made strong points. Implicit bias :- …
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View my achievement here – https://coursera.org/share/a39d3c723d92aee59857b71e11c7135a