Humor Effect
The psychological phenomenon where humorous content is more easily remembered and perceived positively by users.
The psychological phenomenon where humorous content is more easily remembered and perceived positively by users.
The tendency for negative information to have a greater impact on one's psychological state and processes than neutral or positive information.
A cognitive bias where bizarre or unusual information is better remembered than common information.
A scheduling term that indicates a delay in the project timeline that cannot be recovered.
The phenomenon where people have a reduced ability to recall the last items in a list when additional, unrelated information is added at the end.
A quick and often temporary fix applied to a software product to address an urgent issue without going through the full development cycle.
A cognitive bias where individuals underestimate their own abilities and performance relative to others, believing they are worse than average.
Common reading patterns users follow when scanning web content, such as the F-pattern, where users read across the top and then scan down the left side.
A systematic process for determining and addressing needs or gaps between current conditions and desired outcomes.