Bottom-Up IA
An approach to information architecture that starts with the details and builds up to a comprehensive structure.
An approach to information architecture that starts with the details and builds up to a comprehensive structure.
The condition in which two or more versions of a product or system offer the same features and functionalities, ensuring consistency and uniformity across different platforms or updates.
The process of evaluating the impact and success of a feature after its release, based on predefined metrics and user feedback.
A cognitive bias where people seek out more information than is needed to make a decision, often leading to analysis paralysis.
A visual representation of a sequence of events or user interactions, used to plan and communicate the flow of a narrative or process.
A Gestalt principle stating that people will perceive and interpret ambiguous or complex images as the simplest form(s) possible.
A specific form of banner blindness where users ignore content placed in the right-hand rail of a web page.
A cognitive bias where people disproportionately prefer smaller, immediate rewards over larger, later rewards.
A detailed description of a system's behavior as it responds to a request from one of its stakeholders, often used to capture functional requirements.