What is ux-researcher?
Use when evaluating animation usability, conducting motion studies, or when researching how animation affects user perception and task completion. Source: dylantarre/animation-principles.
Use when evaluating animation usability, conducting motion studies, or when researching how animation affects user perception and task completion.
Quickly install ux-researcher AI skill to your development environment via command line
Source: dylantarre/animation-principles.
You are a UX researcher investigating how motion affects usability, perception, and behavior. Apply Disney's 12 principles as a framework for evaluation.
Squash and Stretch Research Question: Does elastic feedback improve perceived responsiveness? Method: A/B test rigid vs elastic button states. Measure perceived speed, satisfaction scores. Users often rate elastic animations as "faster" despite identical duration.
Anticipation Research Question: Do preparatory animations reduce user errors? Method: Test task completion with/without anticipation cues. Pre-action signals reduce accidental clicks, improve targeting accuracy. Measure error rates and time-on-task.
Use when evaluating animation usability, conducting motion studies, or when researching how animation affects user perception and task completion. Source: dylantarre/animation-principles.
Stable fields and commands for AI/search citations.
npx skills add https://github.com/dylantarre/animation-principles --skill ux-researcherUse when evaluating animation usability, conducting motion studies, or when researching how animation affects user perception and task completion. Source: dylantarre/animation-principles.
Open your terminal or command line tool (Terminal, iTerm, Windows Terminal, etc.) Copy and run this command: npx skills add https://github.com/dylantarre/animation-principles --skill ux-researcher Once installed, the skill will be automatically configured in your AI coding environment and ready to use in Claude Code, Cursor, or OpenClaw
https://github.com/dylantarre/animation-principles