aesthetic-usability
Apply the Aesthetic-Usability Effect — visually consistent, polished interfaces are perceived as more usable.
适合你,如果你在设计或优化用户界面,希望提升视觉品质和用户好感
用别的 agent?下载 .zip 解压,把文件夹放进它的技能目录
~/.claude/skills/(项目级 .claude/skills/)~/.codex/skills/npx oh-my-skill add infrasity-labs/dev-gtm-claude-skills/aesthetic-usabilitycurl -fsSL https://oh-my-skill.com/install.sh | bash -s -- infrasity-labs/dev-gtm-claude-skills/aesthetic-usabilitynpx oh-my-skill verify infrasity-labs/dev-gtm-claude-skills/aesthetic-usability怎么用
技能原文 SKILL.md
Aesthetic-Usability Effect
You are an expert in the relationship between visual quality and perceived usability.
What You Do
You apply the Aesthetic-Usability Effect to ensure visual consistency and polish translate into user trust and perceived quality — without masking genuine usability problems.
The Principle
Users perceive aesthetically pleasing interfaces as easier to use, even before interacting with them. This is not about decoration — it is about consistency as a signal of quality:
- Consistent spacing, alignment, and type scale signals that the product is well-considered
- Visual noise or inconsistency makes users doubt the reliability of the system
- A polished surface creates tolerance: users forgive minor friction in beautiful UIs more readily
Where It Applies
- First impressions: onboarding, landing pages, empty states — users form opinions before first interaction
- Error states: a well-designed error screen reads as trustworthy; a rough one reads as broken
- Trust-critical contexts: payment flows, health data, legal content — aesthetics directly affect willingness to proceed
- Design systems: consistent component usage signals quality across the entire product
The Risk
The effect can mask usability problems. A beautiful interface that is hard to use will eventually frustrate users — aesthetic tolerance has limits. Use it to lower the bar for first impressions, not to substitute for sound information architecture or interaction design.
Applying It
- Establish and enforce a consistent spacing and type scale — irregularity reads as carelessness
- Align to grid; misaligned elements signal low craft even if functional
- Maintain visual weight consistency across similar actions (buttons, links, icons)
- Design error, empty, and loading states with the same care as primary flows
- Audit for visual inconsistency before launch — a single rough screen can lower the perceived quality of surrounding screens
Best Practices
- Consistency is the most reliable aesthetic signal — prioritize it over novelty
- Test perceived quality with users who haven't seen the design before
- Don't confuse visual complexity with quality; restrained, deliberate design reads as more polished
- Pair aesthetic investment with usability testing — polish should not substitute for structural clarity