Inhalt
This presentation dismantles the myth that imagery is a universal language, exploring how abstract icons introduce cognitive friction into technical communication. Focusing on psychology and structural linguistics, the session analyzes how visual elements fail within explicit, "low-context" professional environments.
We begin by tracing how relying on "skeuomorphic ghosts"—like the floppy disk "Save" icon—forces users to memorize arbitrary symbols, widening the "Semantic Gap" and increasing cognitive load. The talk then applies Ludwig Wittgenstein's Language-Games to show that communication fails when developers and end-users play different games with the same pieces. We examine why hiding system depth behind minimalist symbols frustrates an audience that expects absolute precision.
Attendees leave with a 3-step "Semiotic Audit" to evaluate documentation, alongside evidence-based design patterns—specifically the "Icon + Label" standard—that slash user error and restore clarity.
Das lernen Sie
Ditch icon-only design. Pair symbols with text to bridge the semantic gap, lower cognitive load, and respect the explicit, low-context clarity that technical users expect.
Vorkenntnisse
Attendees shouldç have a good grounding in theoretical linguistic concepts.