gestalt theory and design principles
past experiences
an observers past experiences tend to shape and affect the way objects are perceived
balance
creates sense of equilibrium; formal-symetrical; informal-asymmetrical
focal points
designs with a definitive point of interest, emphasis or difference capture and hold the viewers attention more effectively than designs without a focal point
proximity
objects that are closer together are perceived as more related than objects that are further apart.
similarity
objects with similar characteristics are percieved as having a stronger relationship than objects that do not share the same set of characteristics
invariance
our mind is very good at recognizing similarities and differences
reification
our minds fill in missing gaps of information automatically.
parallelism
parallel elements are seen as more related to one another than elements that are not parallel
perspective
produces sense of realism through representation of 3-D objects on a 2-D plane; direction of view
contrast
value of distinction between objects; color, size, shape, brightness, etc
symmetry & order
we tend to perceive objects as symmetrical shapes that form around their center
closure
when presented with an incomplete picture we attempt to fill in the gaps. Input missing info in order to create a complete image-sparks satisfaction
movement
dynamic use of lines, points and curves to make objects appear to move force eye to move
figure/ground
elements are perceived as either figure ( the element in focus) or ground (the element on which the figure rests) push & pull between the figure and ground
uniform connectedness
elements are visually connected are perceived as more related than elements that are not touching
common regions
elements of a design are perceived as part of a group if they are located within the same closed region
common fate: synchrony
elements that move or are perceived as moving in the same direction are seen as more related than elements that are stationary or move in different directions
unity
relationship among the elements that gives a sense of oneness to the image; the fundamental principle of design
proportion
relationship between parts to each other and parts to the whole
harmony
shared characteristics, parts relate to and complement each other
law of pragnanz: good figure, law of simplicity
states that people will perceive and interpret ambiguous or complex images as the simplest form possible
multi-stability
the mind seeks to avoid uncertainty. when there is more than one meaning the mind will switch between the two
emergence
the whole is identified before the parts.
continuation
we continue shapes beyond their ending points, follow these "lines" that are also perceived as more relevant