Someone asked that question on LinkedIn in the User Experience group. The author of the question also went on to say:

“Some people read books, some write or share their experience or thoughts on blogs or by simply reading some famous author’s blogs to upgrade their knowledge. Share your most preferred blogs or books to improve and update latest trends on User experience.”

This is a common question to find on LinkedIn or on forums like IXDA. However, I typically find that these are the wrong kind of questions to ask, especially since the question is concerned with “the latest trends.” Also, responders almost always view user experience or interaction design as web design, software usability, or graphic design (a dilemma that isn’t likely to go away anytime soon). Indeed it does include these things, but I feel to do it well one must take a broader perspective of what it means to design technology. In any case, I thought my response to this question was decent, so I decided to re-work it here.

I am about to graduate with a master’s degree in HCI/d from Indiana University, and from what I have learned during my education, work, and research is that the key is to first define what you mean by “experience” and “design.” Admittedly this is a bit biased by my education, but without evaluating how you are defining these two words, it is easy to be at the whim of whatever flavor of design that IXDA or boxesandarrows is tossing around at the moment. There is a lot to read or listen to with regards to both of these concepts, and the definitions of the two could fit on a spectrum with “build a GUI interface in Photoshop” on one end, and “understand the fundamental components of what it means to be a human being” on the other.

For me, I view experience as holistic, all encompassing of culture, language, and people. Design I view both something fundamental to being human, as well as a way of approaching complex problems. It is something that when understood can be a powerful tool for creating meaningful works.

To be a good interaction designer, you need to be able to navigate multiple perspectives, and walk the philosophical line between natural science and social science. And it isn’t easy. If I have to point out some people to read, then Jon Kolko’s Thoughts on Interaction Design, Bill Buxton, and Elizabeth Churchill are a few good reads for a rounded intro to interaction design. Erik Stolterman and Elliot Eisner are perhaps my favorites for design in general. For understanding experience, I recommend Heideggar, Gadamer, and McCarthy & Wright.

But ultimately, it isn’t the reading or the fancy philosophy talk that leads to understanding. Reading can help us to fine-tune our perspectives and the lenses that we see through. It is up to us to put our knowledge to practical use, because only in doing do we truly start to understand.

So how does someone improve or update their knowledge on user experience design? Read anything that blows your hair back, but don’t think that you can passively take it in and “gain” the knowledge you need. Start with yourself. Learn to think beyond yourself, don’t be at the whim of trends, and be humble. Then get out there, practice designing, and be reflective about it.

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