Aesthetics and usability

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Introduction

“The importance of beauty, which we now refer to as “aesthetics”—of man, nature, or artefacts—has been recognized since antiquity. Vitruvius, the first systematic theoretician of architecture (1st Century BC), counted beauty among architecture's three basic requirements (Kruft, 1994).” [1]

Bibliography

Cited

  1. Lavie, T., & Tractinsky, N. (2004). Assessing dimensions of perceived visual aesthetics of web sites. International journal of human-computer studies, 60(3), 269-298. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1071581903001642

General

  • Ben-Bassat, T., Meyer, J., & Tractinsky, N. (2006). Economic and subjective measures of the perceived value of aesthetics and usability. ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI), 13(2), 210-234. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1165737
  • Tractinsky, N. (2011). Visual aesthetics in human-computer interaction: Justification and findings. DHRS2011, 1.
  • Tractinsky, N., Cokhavi, A., & Kirschenbaum, M. Using Ratings and Response Latencies to Evaluate the Consistency of Immediate Aesthetic Perceptions of Web.
  • Tractinsky, N. (2004). A few notes on the study of beauty in HCI. Human–Computer Interaction, 19(4), 351-357.
  • Xu, Y. (2008). Understanding aesthetics design for e-commerce web sites: a cognitive-affective framework. PDF (Research Gate)