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How Wells Fargo learned to innovate around the customer
From Putting People First

How Wells Fargo learned to innovate around the customer

Wells Fargo, the world’s most valuable bank, learned to innovate around the customer. In 1999, Steve Ellis, who runs the bank’s wholesale services group, went to...

Leveraging ethnography to improve food safety
From Putting People First

Leveraging ethnography to improve food safety

Carolyn Rose explains how ethnography can be used to improve food safety: If done correctly, ethnography leads to a holistic and unbiased understanding of current...

The Internet of Words
From Putting People First

The Internet of Words

In his review of the recent books by Alice E. Marwick and danah boyd, Ted Striphas focuses on how they guide us in understanding how the internet is affecting our...

White House launches UX-focused Digital Service team
From Putting People First

White House launches UX-focused Digital Service team

Yesterday, the White House formally launched the U.S. Digital Service. “The Digital Service will be a small team made up of our country’s brightest digital talent...

UX without user research is not UX
From Putting People First

UX without user research is not UX

UX teams are responsible for creating desirable experiences for users. Yet many organizations fail to include users in the development process. Without customer...

Dropbox’s Head of Design on the dawn of personalized products
From Putting People First

Dropbox’s Head of Design on the dawn of personalized products

Soleio Cuervo, design lead at Dropbox, spends his time thinking of new ways for products to understand our needs and wants in real time. After years of firsthand...

Can technology really change your habits?
From Putting People First

Can technology really change your habits?

Downloading an app won’t get you to change your habits. Vivian Giang writes on the science of what will. “There are three kinds of behavioral changes, according...

No time to think
From Putting People First

No time to think

Nowadays, people can keep negative thoughts at bay with a frenzy of activity. Kate Murphy writes on the consequences in the Sunday Review section of the New York...

The psychological and cultural fallout from the end of privacy
From Putting People First

The psychological and cultural fallout from the end of privacy

Alex Preston explores the personal, psychological and cultural impact of the end of privacy in today’s Observer: Here lies our greatest risk, one insufficiently...

The importance of user-focused research in medical device design
From Putting People First

The importance of user-focused research in medical device design

“The human factors activities that deliver safety and effectiveness [in medical devices] do not necessarily deliver a good user experience or, ultimately, a good...

On the importance of forgetting
From Putting People First

On the importance of forgetting

The ongoing debate about Europe’s so-called ‘right to be forgotten‘ ruling on search engines has shone a light onto a key pressure point between technology and...

Applying insights from behavioral economics to policy design
From Putting People First

Applying insights from behavioral economics to policy design

Applying insights from behavioral economics to policy design Brigitte C. Madrian NBER Working paper July 2014 The premise of this article is that an understanding...

Qualitative self-tracking and the Qualified Self
From Putting People First

Qualitative self-tracking and the Qualified Self

Mark Carrigan, sociologist, academic technologist and research assistant at the Centre for Social Ontology, is intellectually drawn to the Quantified Self because...

Social wearables, as seen by the NYT R&D Group
From Putting People First

Social wearables, as seen by the NYT R&D Group

Noah Feehan of the New York Times Research & Development group explores the concept of social wearables: objects that explicitly leverage their visibility or invisibility...

The touch-screen generation
From Putting People First

The touch-screen generation

Young children — even toddlers — are spending more and more time with digital technology. Hanna Rosin wonders what will it mean for their development? “As technology...

HeadCon ’13: What’s new in social science?
From Putting People First

HeadCon ’13: What’s new in social science?

In July, 2013, Edge invited a group of social scientists to participate in an Edge Seminar at Eastover Farm focusing on the state of the art of what the social...

Persona Power
From Putting People First

Persona Power

Article by Shlomo Goltz on “integrating the hero’s journey as part of the user-centered design process”: “There are many prominent and outspoken members of the...

Call to bring refugee-led innovation into humanitarian work
From Putting People First

Call to bring refugee-led innovation into humanitarian work

The humanitarian sector must lift barriers to user-led innovation by refugee communities if it is to meet the challenges of an ever-changing world, says a new report...

Baking behavioral nudges into the products we own
From Putting People First

Baking behavioral nudges into the products we own

Maria Bezaitis, PhD and Principal Engineer of Intel’s User Experience Ethnographic Research Lab, discusses the Real World Web and how internet-enabled sensors will...

[Book]: Nursing Research Using Ethnography
From Putting People First

[Book]: Nursing Research Using Ethnography

Nursing Research Using Ethnography: Qualitative Designs and Methods in Nursing Mary De Chesnay, PhD, RN, PMHCNS-BC, FAAN (Editor) Pub. Date: 08/28/2014 372 pp.,...
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