Proportionality Bias
The tendency to believe that large or significant events must have large or significant causes.
The tendency to believe that large or significant events must have large or significant causes.
A broader, more informal community of interest that spans across the entire organization, focusing on shared topics such as agile practices or UX design.
The core principles that underpin agile methodologies, focusing on collaboration, flexibility, and customer satisfaction.
A collection of design patterns that provides solutions to common design problems.
The act of designing and implementing subtle interventions to influence behavior in a predictable way.
A usability testing approach where designers assume that users are easily confused and distracted, focusing on simplicity and clarity in design.
The study and application of ethical considerations in the development, implementation, and use of technology.
A cognitive bias that leads individuals to prefer things to remain the same rather than change, often resisting new options or changes.
A dark pattern where the product asks for the user's social media or email credentials and then spams all the user's contacts.