Moral Luck
A phenomenon where the success or failure of a design or business outcome is influenced by external factors beyond the control of the decision-makers, akin to serendipity.
A phenomenon where the success or failure of a design or business outcome is influenced by external factors beyond the control of the decision-makers, akin to serendipity.
A decision-making strategy where individuals are prompted to make a choice rather than defaulting to a pre-set option.
Situation-Complication-Resolution (SCR) is a communication and problem-solving framework used to structure information clearly and logically.
An approach to information architecture that begins with high-level structures and breaks them down into detailed components.
Representational State Transfer (REST) is an architectural style for designing networked applications based on stateless, client-server communication.
A writing style where the most important information is presented at the beginning, followed by supporting details in order of decreasing importance.
The study of how individuals make choices among alternatives and the principles that guide these choices.
A learning phenomenon where information is better retained when study sessions are spaced out over time rather than crammed in a short period.
A concept in transactional analysis that describes three different aspects of the self: Parent, Adult, and Child, each influencing behavior and communication.