Modelling perceptual product experience – Towards a cohesive framework of presentation and representation in design

This paper proposes a cohesive and comprehensive framework for perceptual product experience (PPE). The framework aims at bringing together the variety of perceptual experiences that we may have when encountering products and objects. Apart from the core sensorial, cognitive and affective modes, the framework takes into account that any experience has dimensions of presentation and representation, which are distinctively different in nature. The framework is useful for understanding the totality of perceptual experiences arising from non-instrumental interaction with products, and to inform the design of products with respect to how the product is experienced.

[1]  Donald A. Norman,et al.  Emotion & design: attractive things work better , 2002, INTR.

[2]  D. Reisberg Cognition: Exploring the Science of the Mind , 2001 .

[3]  R. Arnheim Art and Visual Perception, a Psychology of the Creative Eye , 1967 .

[4]  Simon Schütte,et al.  Engineering Emotional Values in Product Design : Kansei Engineering in Development , 2005 .

[5]  George Mather,et al.  Foundations of Perception , 2006 .

[6]  K. Krippendorff The Semantic Turn: A New Foundation For Design , 2005 .

[7]  Alan H. Goldman Aesthetic Qualities and Aesthetic Value , 1990 .

[8]  P. Desmet,et al.  Framework of product experience , 2007 .

[9]  A. Tversky,et al.  The framing of decisions and the psychology of choice. , 1981, Science.

[10]  Herbert A. Simon,et al.  Situated Action: A Symbolic Interpretation , 1993, Cogn. Sci..

[11]  Anders Warell,et al.  Visual product identity: Understanding identity perceptions conveyed by visual product design. , 2006 .

[12]  R. L. Solso Cognition and the visual arts , 1994 .

[13]  Klaus Krippendorff,et al.  Product Semantics: Exploring the Symbolic Qualities of Form , 1984 .

[14]  D. Norman Emotional design : why we love (or hate) everyday things , 2004 .

[15]  Herbert A. Simon Alternative representations for cognition: Search and reasoning. , 1992 .

[16]  P. Clarkson,et al.  Seeing things: consumer response to the visual domain in product design , 2004 .

[17]  James G. Greeno,et al.  Situativity and Symbols: Response to Vera and Simon , 1993, Cogn. Sci..