电子商务-外文翻译-外文文献-英文文献-色彩对网站吸引力和用户认知过程的影响(1).doc
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1、The impact of colour on Website appeal and userscognitive processesNathalie Bonnardel, Annie PiolatLudovic, Le BigotAbstract:One of the challenges today in humancomputer interaction is to design systems that are not only usable but also appealing to users. In order to contribute to meet this challen
2、ge, our general objective in the present study was to enhance current understanding of the perceptual features that favour users interactions with Websites. This is a particularly important issue, as users first impressions when they land on a site determine whether or not they stay on it. We conduc
3、ted two experimental studies, focusing on one specific perceptual feature: Website colour. The first study investigated designers and users preferred colours for a Web homepage. Although researchers generally flag up differences between designers and users, we found that the latter also had several
4、favourite colours in common. On the basis of these initial results, three colours were selected for a second study exploring colour in relation to an entire Website. The main originality of this second study lays in the fact that we used both subjective and objective measurements to gauge the impact
5、 of colour, analyzing not only users judgments but also their Website navigation and the items of information they memorized. Results of this second study showed that colours were a determining factor in the way that users interacted with the Website. Their influence was also observed afterwards, wh
6、en users were asked to exploit the information they had gleaned from the Website. As such, these findings will have a practical value for Website designers.Keywords: Colour appeal, Website design, Navigation, User-centred design1 IntroductionThe importance of visual perception in humancomputer inter
7、action (HCI) has long been acknowledged (e.g., 1). In the past, authors generally advocated a user-centred approach, putting forward ergonomic recommendations, or “golden rules” 1,2. These recommendations tended to focus on users cognitive and perceptual-motor abilities, rather than on what they fel
8、t when interacting with a system. Now, however, humans and their interactions with systems are increasingly being studied at three different levels: knowing, doing and feeling 3. In recent years, the “feeling” level has become a popular research topic in cognitive science and the science of design,
9、with advances in our understanding of feelings, affects and emotions 4,5 having implications for the latter 68. When developing products or systems, designers have to come up with design solutions that are both novel and adapted to their future users 9,10. This adaptation to future users must encomp
10、ass several complementary aspects. Usability is no longer the ultimate goal for designers. New systems must also have an aesthetic value and inject a little fun and pleasure into people s lives 7,11.In addition to their functional characteristics, interactive systems must be regarded as conveying fe
11、elings through visual sensory modalities.In the present study, we sought to enhance current understanding of one perceptual feature, namely colour, in a type of interactive system where aesthetics and attractiveness constitute a particular challenge: the Website. Here, users initial feelings are cru
12、cial, as it is during the first few seconds of interaction that users or visitors decide whether or not to continue navigating the Website 1214.Lindgaard et al. 15 showed that users first impressions are constructed in about 50 ms and appear to be stable over time. They allow users to develop an aes
13、thetic impression of the Web page,which influences their subsequent navigation. Since visitors preferences are based on the Website s aesthetic features 16,17, our objective was to analyze one particular perceptual feature that contributes considerably to first impressions: Website colour. Colours h
14、ave the potential to affect our perceptions, emotional reactions and behavioural intentions 18. However, little research has been done on the impact of colours in Internet-based environments and only a handful of researchers have conducted studies on this topic in recent years e.g., 19,20. With a vi
15、ew to filling this gap, the aim of our study was twofold:identifying colours that Website designers and users find appealing;determining whether some colours favour Website visitors navigation and cognitive processes.To this end, we carried out two experimental studies. The first one investigated th
16、e preferences expressed by designers and users when they were shown Website homepages in 23 different colours. The second one analyzed how the use of three different colours (selected on the basis of the results from the first study) in Website design influenced interactions between visitors and thr
17、ee different versions of the same Website. We argued that the role of colours is essential not only when accessing a site and navigating it, but also after the actual interaction has come to an end and users exploit the information they have just obtained from the site. Before describing these studi
18、es, we present their theoretical framework, in order to underline both the importance of perceptual and aesthetic features (e.g., colours) in terms of the affects or emotions they convey, and their influence on usersinteractions with systems.2 Emotions, aesthetics and coloursFor years, researchers s
19、howed little or no interest in the possible links between emotion and cognition, and between usability and users emotions and aesthetic feelings. Only recently have they sought to draw these different threads together. We therefore begin by briefly characterizing emotions and their relationship with
20、 cognition, as well as their implications for product design (2.1).We then point out the relationships between aesthetic feelings and users judgments (2.2), as well as between one aesthetic feature in particular (product colour) and users preferences (2.3).2.1 Emotions, cognition and product designT
21、he numerous papers on the subject of emotions offer divergent points of view about emotional phenomena e.g., 21,5,22. Scherer22 suggested distinguishing between various affective states and,in particular, contrasting utilitarian emotions and aesthetic emotions.These two kinds of emotion result from
22、an appraisal of environmental or proprioceptive information, but have different functions. Utilitarian emotions, such as anger and fear, allow us to adapt to events that may have major consequences for us as individuals. These adaptive functions may consist in the preparation of actions (such as con
23、frontation or escape) or the recuperation and reorientation of work. In contrast, aesthetic emotions are unrelated to the need to satisfy vital and mandatory needs.For instance, a person can be impressed, admiring or fascinated.These diffuse sensations differ considerably from utilitarian emotions w
24、ith regard to felt arousal and behaviour orientation.Although emotion is not understood as well as cognition, both of them can be regarded as information processing systems 23, but with different functions and operating parameters. Cognition allows us to interpret the world and make sense of it, whe
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