The Three-Fold View of the Social Media User Experience | CenterNetworks
I was documenting all of this in order to flesh out a psychologically-oriented framework for the user experience. One that would replace straight ahead user “needs” and “goals”, which work for user-software interaction design, with a self-reflexive set of user interests — better suited for user-software-user, or social interaction design. It seemed to me obvious that user intentions, motives, compulsions, obsessions, fantasies, interactions, expectations, anticipations, preoccupations all played a part in the user engagement. That each user would probably have habits and routines of use that were a direct manifestation of his or her sensitivities in different areas of a) sense of self, self-presentation, and self image; b) perceptions of friends, unfamiliars, and audiences; and c) interpersonal communication, relationship handling, and interaction styles.




