Wind, Not Sand: Mapping Dynamic Emotion Across a Product Landscape
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Transcript of Wind, Not Sand: Mapping Dynamic Emotion Across a Product Landscape
M A P P I N G D Y N A M I C E M O T I O N A C R O S S A P R O D U C T L A N D S C A P E
W I N D , N O T S A N D
E R I N H O F F M A N , U X W E E K 2 0 1 5
– S O R E N K I E R K E G A A R D , 1 8 4 8
“To be a teacher in the right sense is to be a learner. Instruction begins when you, the teacher, learn from
the learner, put yourself in his place so that you may understand
what he understands and the way he understands it.”
– S O R E N K I E R K E G A A R D , 1 8 4 8
“To be a teacher in the right sense is to be a learner. Instruction begins when you, the teacher, learn from
the learner, put yourself in his place so that you may understand
what he understands and the way he understands it.”
“Teaching well is really freaking hard.”
– E R I N H O F F M A N , 2 0 1 5
2%
98%
everyone else game designers
S P E A K E R S AT U X W E E K 2 0 1 5
2%
98%
everyone else game designers
S P E A K E R S AT U X W E E K 2 0 1 5
you (probably)
me
on twitter
• things to note:
• most demos blend
• gamers don’t
on twitter
so my system speaking to your system
is kind of bizarre and incredible
world model
space whales*
world model
space whales *
G A M E P E O P L EA N I N T R O D U C T I O N T O
T H I N G S N O R M A L P E O P L E C A R E A B O U T
• meaningful work
• vacation
• relationships
• good food
• family
• hobbies
T H I N G S T H AT G A M E P E O P L E C A R E A B O U T
• games
(this is bizarre and distressing)*
* and also may be starting to change
W H E R E G A M E P E O P L E C O M E F R O M
W E ’ R E A L L O U T S I D E R S
• my parents divorced when I was 5
• my mixed ethnic background guaranteed cultural outsider status wherever I went
• I was a girl who liked technology instead of boys or makeup
B U T G A M E S U N D E R S T O O D M E
• the game exists for us to play it
• the game is “infinitely patient”
• the game doesn’t care how many times you try - it wants you to try again
• the game loves you (even when you don’t love yourself)
I T ’ S A L L T O S AY T H AT…
• games are really different
• they represent an outsider culture
• the mainstream has never understood us
• the design community has never understood us …and probably never will
A N D W H AT ’ S P E R T I N E N T H E R E …
• games (historically) were never about usability
• the culture actually willfully resists the idea of usability
• usability means accessibility and accessibility means mainstream
• and mainstream is gross
so thank god for social games and UX
because before UX we had System Shock 2, and someone needed to save us from ourselves
T R I P H A W K I N S G O T ( M O R E T H A N ) O N E T H I N G R I G H T
• game designers are artists
• and artists are about provoking emotion
(legends, all)
usually that emotion is pretty simple (simple emotion sell$)
scary!omg fast!
BAD.ASS.epic!
…but sometimes it’s not
the regret of well-intended complicity in abusive
systems
the existential loneliness of being human and confronted with the
other in the wake of ancient hubris-generated apocalypse
(probs the greatest game ever made just fyi)(e.g., while you weren’t looking, games kinda grew up)
W H AT I S T H E C O R E E M O T I O N I N Y O U R P R O D U C T ?
let us pause
but no matter what, a game must* have one quality:
but no matter what, a game must* have one quality:
fun.
but no matter what, a game must* have one quality:
fun.
(duh)
(no fun equals no $ equals no more games)
F U NS O L E T ’ S TA L K A B O U T
A S Y O U M I G H T I M A G I N E
• game designers spend an awful lot of time talking about what “fun” is
• the most widely-accepted definition comes from a game designer named Raph Koster (you might recognize Star Wars Galaxies, EverQuest II, Ultima Online - that’s Raph)
• though now he might be more well known for his book:
– R A P H K O S T E R
“That’s what games are, in the end. Teachers. Fun is just another word for learning.”
And Raph said…
• this hit the world of game design like a bomb — it was so obvious and true
world model
space whales*
world model
space whales *
game design early child psych
But Raph was riffing off the work of a lot of smart people…
Leading to what I call the “depth hierarchy of nerddom” on fun:
Jesse Schell - “fun isn’t important”
Raph Koster - “fun is learning”
James Paul Gee - “fun is the scientific method”
Fred Rogers* - “play is the work of childhood”
Jean Piaget - “play is assimilation without adaptation” (3 kinds of play: practice, symbolic, rules-based)
Lev Vygotsky - “play is a self-actualizing tool of the mind that maximizes the zone of proximal development”
(some neuroscientist, maybe Judy Willis**)
** http://www.psychologytoday.com/files/attachments/4141/the-neuroscience-joyful-education-judy-willis-md.pdf
image by G. Blackney, middle school earth sciences
* you could maybe stick Csikszentmihalyi*** here but I like Mr. Rogers better because it’s easier to type
*** but for the record I just wanted to prove that I could spell Csikszentmihalyi
T H E R E V O L U T I O N A R Y I D E A B E H I N D G L A S S L A B W A S
• school is really, really boring.
• maybe video game designers could make school less boring.
• if kids are less bored, maybe they’ll learn better.
• and maybe big data could enable the creation of genuine adaptive, personalized learning.
No problem!, we thought. If games are about fun and fun is about learning,
this’ll be easy! Time to revolutionize education!
so we brought the brand new SimCity into classrooms…
and the kids said: so this is pretty fun,
but we’re not learning anything.(and SimCity historically has been used by
teachers to teach all sorts of things)
This blew open Raph’s theory.
“Fun is learning” wasn’t the conclusive epiphany we (designers) thought it was — it was just the
beginning.
Over the course of the next two years and three products, I got to watch tons of breathtakingly talented teachers in
action.
teaches environmental science and systems
thinking 2013
in collaboration with NASA and the National Writing
Project, teaches argumentation
2014
in collaboration with the teachers of Epic charter
school, teaches proportional reasoning
2015
when students were really engaged in learning, there was something going on that wasn’t “fun”.
it was something deeper, something special.
(real kids playing our real games)
this was an emotion I’d never seen before. I became obsessed with it.
remember when I said game designers are artists? and artists are painters of emotion?
E M O T I O NS O L E T ’ S TA L K A B O U T
pop quiz
how many of you know who paul eckman is?
pop quiz
how many of you have seen pixar’s Inside Out?
if you’ve seen Inside Out, you know Eckman
• took photographs of faces around the world
• asked thousands of people from dozens of cultures to identify the emotions
• identified seven (at first six) universal emotions
(the new one)
the one it drives me nuts that they cut
out!
(the new one)
the one it drives me nuts that they cut
out!but where’s ‘fun’?
and where’s ‘learning’?
it seemed to be a little bit of all of them, each in a different order…
sometimes… for 14 year olds… kind of?… definitely…
actually yeah… this one too… getting closer…
it seemed to be a little bit of all of them, each in a different order…
sometimes… for 14 year olds… kind of?… definitely…
actually yeah… this one too… getting closer…
fun/learning wasn’t one emotion, but a process between many.
I called it sophia*: fun is the cognitive mechanical process by which we convert fear into happiness
through surprise
* as in “philein sophia” or “philosophy” - the love (philo-) of wisdom (-soph)
M I C R O B E SS O L E T ’ S TA L K A B O U T
how many live in your body?
how many live in your body?
let’s talk microbes!
- over 100 trillion microbes (about 2-6lbs per person) - microbes outnumber human cells 10:1 - 1000 species in your gut - 200 species on the surface of your eye - tons still unidentified - scientists call it “the second genome”
how many live in your body?
let’s talk microbes!
- over 100 trillion microbes (about 2-6lbs per person) - microbes outnumber human cells 10:1 - 1000 species in your gut - 200 species on the surface of your eye - tons still unidentified - scientists call it “the second genome”
how you doin'?
your microbiome = ~100 trillion microbes
the milky way = ~100 billion stars
the second genome
the second genome
how many live in your body?
let’s talk microbes!
- over 100 trillion microbes (about 2-6lbs per person) - microbes outnumber human cells 10:1 - 1000 species in your gut - 200 species on the surface of your eye - tons still unidentified - scientists call it “the second genome”
how you doin’ (now)?
I called it sophia*: fun is the cognitive mechanical process by which we convert fear into happiness
through surprise
* as in “philein sophia” or “philosophy” - the love (philo-) of wisdom (-soph)
the key is the arc
curiosityanxiety
threat
stress
failure
tenacity
surprise
mastery
insight
S T O R Y T E L L E R S K N O W T H I S
• without foreshadowing there is no anticipation
• without anticipation there’s no tension
• without reversal there’s no insight
• without insight there’s no story
(segue)
And this is why it’s so damn annoying that Inside Out left out Surprise.
when it comes to Eckman universals and both storytelling and product, Surprise might be the most important emotion there is.
M O D E R N M E T H O D S O F M E A S U R I N G E M O T I O N I N C L U D E :
• surveys
• brain fMRIs that detect… “excitation” (aka something is happening and we don’t really know what)
• hand-encoding videos of changes in facial expression
• …surveys
emotional research is really this gigantic unexplored frontier now that we have the capability
to process dynamic data
H O W W O U L D Y O U C R E AT E A N A R C , I N C L U D I N G R E V E R S A L A N D I N S I G H T, F O R T H E C O R E E M O T I O N I N Y O U R
P R O D U C T ?
let us pause
D Y N A M I C E M O T I O NS O L E T ’ S TA L K A B O U T
A L L E M O T I O N I S D Y N A M I C
T H E T R U T H I S
W E ’ R E R E A L LY B A D AT M E A S U R I N G D Y N A M I C T H I N G S
T H E O T H E R T R U T H I S
so let’s assume emotion is a landscape, not a fixed point in time; it’s a dynamic system that has things
like hysteresis and momentum
fear surprise
contempt
happiness
anger
disgust
sadness
if we were to design for a specific progression, what would it look like?
fear surprise
contempt
happiness
anger
disgust
sadness
Y O U B E G I N W I T H PA I N P O I N T S
• Your starting point is probably your user’s pain point.
• Don’t run from the pain point, and don’t assume you’ll erase it immediately; to be fulfilled, it must be embraced.
• …even amplified.
• In a game, pain is challenge, and challenge is good.
PA I N I N A R G U M E N TAT I O N
• When we began Mars Generation One: Argubot Academy, we set out to identify pain in argumentation.
• When you’re bad at arguing, you feel:
• confused
• powerless
• unpopular
• stupid
• confused
• powerless
• unpopular
• stupid
• clear
• powerful
• charismatic
• genius
so we knew we needed to bring about this emotional transition:
our message was: learn to argue well, using evidence, and you’ll become convincing, popular, admired, and powerful
E M O T I O N A L C L U S T E R I N G
• We began by digging deeper into the pain point analysis.
• After many interviews with teachers, the same problems emerged between instructors and students.
• These qualities created the dominant emotional reaction of confusion.
VA G U E
aspects of argumentation
S U B J E C T I V E
A B S T R A C T
H A R D T O R E M E M B E R
C O M P L E X
VA G U ES U B J E C T I V E
A B S T R A C T
H A R D T O R E M E M B E R
C O M P L E X
so we took these qualities and searched for game experiences that were the opposite
P R E C I S E
O B J E C T I V E
C O N C R E T EM A S T E R A B L E
S I M P L E
P R E C I S E O B J E C T I V E C O N C R E T EM E M O R A B L E S I M P L E
it turns out that these are feelings that games innately convey particularly well
So we applied a concrete system that scaffolded into great complexity (otherwise it wouldn’t ever really feel like argumentation) but was
masterable and simple. Aka…
G O T TA C AT C H ‘ E M A L L
• Pokemon is an incredibly complex game involving constant computation, comparison, and memorization.
• Kids love it anyway because it’s so concrete and memorable.
• So the important thing to remove from argumentation wasn’t the complexity, but the abstractness and subjectivity.
Our “argubots” paralleled forms of argument, but made them visually memorable, masterable, and full of personality.
T H E R E S U LT S
• Well, ask the kids:
• “BOOM!”
• “wait wait wait we want to hear this!”
• “that’s TOTALLY not related!”
• “that [argument] wasn’t even, like, legit!”
• “omg, K-O!”
• “data was inconsistent, it wasn’t supporting”
• “fiiiiiiight!”
• “let’s go CQ!*”
This approach to argumentation was:
• concrete
• exciting
• masterable
• relatable* a 6th grader referencing philosopher Stephen Toulmin
by taking them from one painful side of the emotional map to the other, we changed the way
they thought about argumentation and reason
curiosityanxiety
threat
stress
failure
tenacity
surprise mastery
insight
abstractconfused
afraid
can’t remember getting it
got it
winning
contrast this with the emotionally flat way argumentation is traditionally taught
it’s not memorable because there’s no surprise, no discovery, no choice, no tension, no reversal
when you’re designing, consider the user’s emotional journey — where are you taking them?
where do they begin? where do they end?
fear surprise
contempt
happiness
anger
disgust
sadness
F I N A L Q U E S T I O N S
• Where are your moments of surprise?
• Where are you showing your user that you really understand their pain?
• Where are your transition points between pain and ecstasy?
• Where are your users discovering insights for themselves?
• What is your unique core emotion and how are you centering your design decisions on it?
• What is the emotional path for each of your user archetypes?
T H A N K S F O R P L AY I N G
T H A T ’ S I T
@gryphoness
lately, this has become the context for some genuinely awful behavior
it’s baffling for those of us who came from this culture
1 9 9 8 2 0 0 3 2 0 0 5 2 0 0 6 2 0 0 8 2 0 1 0 2 0 1 2 2 0 1 3 2 0 1 4
…but we don’t know anything else(I was 17) (you do the
math)
I N 2 0 1 3 , A F U N N Y T H I N G H A P P E N E D T O M E
• I was taken in by scientists.
• 24 scientists, to be exact, from the likes of the Stanford Research Institute, NASA, and Educational Testing Service (the folk who make the SAT).
• these are nerds among nerds.
and remember that emotions hybridize