From the course: UX Foundations: Interaction Design
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Navigation systems
From the course: UX Foundations: Interaction Design
Navigation systems
- [Narrator] There are several types of navigation systems. We should choose and design a system that is most well-suited to the product, the context in which it will be used and what people will need it to do for them. Hierarchical navigation is used when there are levels in the structure of the content and functionality. We typically see this as a navigation system with nested lists or menus that provide direct access to each of the categories and levels within them. We may also see the use of breadcrumbs when content and structure are hierarchical, because it helps communicate a sense of place. People can quickly see where they are in the hierarchy of what is often a large system, and they can use it to navigate back up through the levels. Product catalogs on shopping sites are traditionally hierarchical. Men's apparel, shoes, athletic shoes, running shoes, ventilated running shoes. Hub-and-spoke navigation has a…
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Dimensions of interaction design1m 37s
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Design thinking3m 8s
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Levels of design: Structure4m 43s
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Levels of design: Flow4m 54s
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Levels of design: Interface1m 59s
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Design patterns2m 31s
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Anti-patterns2m 27s
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Dark patterns3m 44s
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Navigation structure2m 1s
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Navigation systems6m
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Content7m 3s
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Inputs5m 47s
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Gestures3m 47s
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Voice3m 34s
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Sensors1m 10s
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Defining microinteractions3m 16s
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Microinteractions: Motion3m 15s
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Microinteractions: Sound3m 53s
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Microinteractions: Haptics4m 34s
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Error handling2m 43s
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Mistakes1m 59s
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Usability and accessibility5m
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