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La psicología de los objetos cotidianos (Serie Media nº 6) (Spanish Edition) Kindle Edition
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¿Por qué los teléfonos modernos tienen teclas que no sirven para nada? ¿Por qué no se sabe, con frecuencia, si para abrir una puerta hay que empujar, o tirar, o si se trata de una puerta deslizante? ¿Por qué es tan difícil entender un manual de instrucciones?
Con muchos ejemplos similares y en clave de humor, Donald A. Norman, uno de los psicólogos más imaginativos de las últimas décadas, analiza los problemas del diseño de los objetos que nos rodean en la vida cotidiana y el tipo de conocimiento que cada uno requiere. La obra es también una amena y lúcida lección de psicología que utiliza el diseño como excusa.
"Todos somos víctimas de la perversidad natural de los objetos inanimados. He aquí un libro que, por fin, se revuelve contra los objetos, los diseñadores, los fabricantes y el resto de los seres humanos que originan y mantienen esta perversidad." Isaac Asimov
"Un libro entretenido y apasionante, lleno de historias sobre cómo se diseñan los objetos y sobre cómo deberían ser diseñados." R. Shank, catedrático de Psicología de la Universidad de Yale
"Un libro lleno de encanto, de enorme importancia para todos los que vivimos en un mundo de máquinas que no sabemos manejar y manuales de instrucciones que no nos ayudan a aprender, y para aquellos que diseñan el mundo. Los psicólogos nos acusan de haber perdido el contacto con nuestros sentimientos; Norman demuestra que ni siquiera tenemos contacto con los objetos que nos rodean." The Magazine of International Design
- LanguageSpanish
- PublisherEditorial Nerea
- Publication dateMay 22, 2018
- File size12333 KB
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Product details
- ASIN : B07D8X6JRM
- Publisher : Editorial Nerea; 5th edition (May 22, 2018)
- Publication date : May 22, 2018
- Language : Spanish
- File size : 12333 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- Word Wise : Not Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 360 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,146,961 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #498 in Children's Nonfiction Art Books
- #607 in Children's Art Books (Kindle Store)
- #787 in Industrial & Product Design
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Don Norman is a voyeur, always watching, always on the lookout for some common-day occurrence that everyone else takes for granted but that when examined, yields insight into the human condition. (If you are rushing to catch a train, how do you know if you got to the station on time? Empty platform? You probably are too late. People milling about, looking at their watches,peering down the tracks? Probably OK. Who needs technology when people are so informative, even if as an accidental byproduct of their activities.
Business Week has named him one of "the world's most influential designers," the influence from his books, essasys, courses and students, lectures, and consulting.
He takes special delight in the interaction of people and technology. "Develop the skill of observation," he councils: especially pay attention to the obvious. "Question the obvious and you will dis cover many hidden insights. What seems to be obvious often is not."
He is a fellow of many organizations and former lots of things, including VP at Apple Computer and even President of a startup. He has honorary degrees from the University of Padua (Italy) and the Technical University Delft (the Netherlands). He was awarded the Benjamin Franklin medal in Computer and Cognitive Science and is a member of the National Academy of Engineering. He is known for his books "The Design of Everyday Things," "Emotional Design," and "The Design of Future Things," but he is most proud of his students, now all over the world, who put into practice his human-centered design philosophy. his latest book is "Living with Complexity," which argues that complexity is necessary: Our tools must match our tasks. When people cry out for simplicity, they are wrong -- people want understanding. That is not the same as simplicity -- simple thing are often the most confusing.
He is currently revising "Design of Everyday Things" to keep the message the same but update the examples. Expected publication date is August 2013.
He lives at www.jnd.org, where you can find chapters from his books and loads of essays.
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