The Four Pleasures

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The Four Pleasures Patrick W. Jordan. 2000. Designing Pleasurable Products: an Introduction to the New Human Factors. Taylor and Francis, London Adapted from presentation by Lyn Pemberton, Interactive Technologies Research Group University of Brighton

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The Four Pleasures. Patrick W. Jordan. 2000. Designing Pleasurable Products: an Introduction to the New Human Factors . Taylor and Francis, London Adapted from presentation by Lyn Pemberton, Interactive Technologies Research Group University of Brighton. Hierarchy of Consumer Needs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Four Pleasures

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The Four PleasuresThe Four Pleasures

Patrick W. Jordan. 2000.

Designing Pleasurable Products: an Introduction to the New Human Factors.Taylor and Francis, London

Adapted from presentation by Lyn Pemberton, Interactive Technologies Research Group University of Brighton

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Hierarchy of Consumer NeedsHierarchy of Consumer Needs

Pleasure

Usability

Functionalitycf. Maslow’s hierarchy of human needs

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Jordan distinguishes four types of product related pleasures, i.e. the practical, emotional and aesthetic benefits associated with products:

• Physio-pleasure

• Psycho-pleasure

• Socio-pleasure• Ideo-pleasure

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Physio-pleasurePhysio-pleasure

To do with the body and sensory organs - touch, taste, smell, hearing

• shape of a telephone handset

• texture of pen, toothbrush, new clothes

• smell of new car

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Psycho-pleasurePsycho-pleasure

To do with people’s cognitive and emotional reactions

• a really engaging video game

• a brilliant piece of software that lets you do something very complex very easily, e.g. the early spreadsheet effect

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Socio-pleasureSocio-pleasure

To do with your connection to other people - friends, relatives, colleagues, unknown others. Also social identity.

• people may come round to see you to play on your new GameCube or gather round to look at your new phone

• clothing mark you out as member of socio-economic group

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Ideo-pleasureIdeo-pleasure

To do with people’s values -

• a pair of “vegetarian” shoes

• carrying the Guardian rather than the Sun

• looking at your beautiful wall mounted plasma screen TV when you come home every day

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SummarySummary

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