Computer systems shouldn't make us feel bad. But they often do. Contextual usability methods can help discover social defects in user experience.| Nielsen Norman Group
Need numerical data about your product’s UX, but not sure where to start? Check out this list of the most popular quantitative methods to help you pick a tool.| Nielsen Norman Group
User research places people in the center of your design process. It’s all about asking the right questions so that you learn the user’s behaviors, needs, and desires, leading you to build the right solutions. The type of research you will conduct depends on the type of project you’re working on, where you are in the process, your timeline, budget, etc. Follow along as we outline different research methods, risks involved with skipping research, and a brief case study.| Sympraxis Consulting
Research-based articles about user experience (UX), interaction design, web usability, user testing, and UI/GUI design by Nielsen Norman Group authors, including Jakob Nielsen, Don Norman, Bruce 'Tog' Tognazzini, and other group members.| Nielsen Norman Group
Simple usability tests where users think out loud are cheap, robust, flexible, and easy to learn. Thinking aloud should be the first tool in your UX toolbox, even though it entails some risks and doesn't solve all problems.| Nielsen Norman Group
Improve your UI designs by considering many ideas before settling on any one of them. A solid ideation methodology broadens your idea-generation capacity.| Nielsen Norman Group