Intertemporal Choice
The study of how people make choices about what and how much to do at various points in time, often involving trade-offs between costs and benefits occurring at different times.
The study of how people make choices about what and how much to do at various points in time, often involving trade-offs between costs and benefits occurring at different times.
Quantitative data that provides broad, numerical insights but often lacks the contextual depth that thick data provides.
Qualitative data that provides insights into the context and human aspects behind quantitative data.
The principle stating that there is a limit to the amount of complexity that users can handle, and if designers don't manage complexity, users will.
A cognitive bias that occurs when conclusions are drawn from a non-representative sample, focusing only on successful cases and ignoring failures.
A unit of measure used in Agile project management to estimate the relative effort required to complete a user story or task.
The set of shared values, practices, and goals that characterize a startup company.