Jan 14

The case for creating visually appealing and usable web sites (and applications) now has more ammunition. An article on nature.com reveals a university study suggesting evidence that web users make their first impressions much more quickly than one might expect.

We all know that first impressions count, but this study shows that the brain can make flash judgements almost as fast as the eye can take in the information. ... [Researchers] found that impressions were made in the first 50 milliseconds of viewing.

Fifty milliseconds is incredibly fast. One twentieth of a second is a single frame of 20fps video, or roughly half the time it takes to blink.

The article goes on to suggest that overall simplicity, a trend borne of the the Web Standards movement, is a crucial step towards making a lasting impression:

These days, enlightened web users want to see a "puritan" approach ... It's about getting information across in the quickest, simplest way possible.

This is hard evidence that we as web designers and developers must create a good, lasting first impression, or we are not doing our job.

Comments

Great article. I think it is very important today not to underestimate the importance of good design. Yes, form must always follow function - but if you are wrapping function in ugly and unappealing form then it may take just 50 milliseconds to make the wrong first impression in your users eyes :)
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