Roberts M – FROM REASONING AND INTELLIGENCE RESEARCH TO INFORMATION DESIGN

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Description

Schematic transit maps—highly stylised diagrams that prioritise routes and connections over geographic accuracy—are ubiquitous but challenging to design well. Henry Beck’s octolinear London map is a celebrated exemplar, yet other high-profile schematics (Vignelli’s New York, Madrid’s grid, Paris’s official map) show that excessive abstraction or poor handling of line trajectories can reduce usability or public acceptance. Empirical studies reveal a frequent dissociation between subjective preferences (often biased toward familiar octolinearity) and objective performance: people may prefer maps that are harder to use. Roberts proposes a five-part framework for effective design—simplicity, coherence, balance, harmony, and topographicity—arguing octolinearity is not universally optimal and that angle-sets should be chosen to fit network structure. Grounding design in reasoning and intelligence research explains how element salience and working-memory load affect map comprehension. Well-designed schematics should speed planning, reduce errors, support learning, and be accepted by users; testing and prioritising criteria empirically is essential.

Additional information

Pages

13

Filesize

3.4Mb