In this article, Denys Mishunov explores how the brain perceives web performance and introduces us to Psychological Performance Optimisation (PPO)
Before getting to the psychological part of performance optimisation, let’s answer one question, what is web performance? For the majority of frontend developers the answer would include something exciting like: 100-millisecond response time, animations with 60 frames per second, loading a page within one second and many other numbers. Guess what? The world is a cruel place and unfortunately not only web developers have access to the web. It’s a public place that is also used by regular users who seem to be forgotten in our definition of performance. But what do they think about web performance? Usually it’s fast or slow. “SpeedIndex of this site isn’t as good as of that one. 280 milliseconds slower first paint is the reason, I guess,” – said no user without DevTools ever. These diverging views on performance come from the fact that time can be observed from two points: objective and subjective or psychological.
Objective is the time we can measure with a stopwatch and is what we, developers, mean by performance: seconds, milliseconds, etc. On the other hand psychological time is the time as it’s perceived by users. The reason why we should be looking at psychological performance is that unless users perceive the site as fast or faster, whatever we’ve done to our performance optimisation matters very little. We fail the main purpose of our optimisations.
TIME PERCEPTION IN HUMANS
Perception of time by humans is a complex process. We can sense the flow of time, but the exact nature of the mechanism by which this is done remains unclear. The lack of a dedicated brain area for temporal processing makes understanding the process difficult. This does not mean we are out of control. There is enough knowledge about it for the purpose of performance optimisation. Let’s start with the basic functional mechanism.
EVENT IN A NUTSHELL
Bu hikaye NET dergisinin June 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye NET dergisinin June 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Camille Gribbons
UX designer at Booking.com, Camille Gribbons reveals how she first got into the industry
THE 5G UI REVOLUTION
Tris Tolliday describes his vision of a web UI catapulted forwards by 5G
HOW TO SHOWCASE YOUR DEV SKILLS
Aude Barral shares 5 top tips for landing your dream developer job
KNIVES OUT
Murder mystery film, Knives Out, grabbed everyone’s attention, and so did the fun website that promoted it. Oblio tells Tom May how it created its innovative 3D navigation
HOW EMOTIONAL LABOUR HINDERS WOMEN IN TECH
Christine Brewis, head of digital marketing at Studio Graphene, discusses how gender parity in tech has changed over the last ten years, and what more can be done
EDAN KWAN
He swapped life as a singer for a career making eye-popping digital visuals. The Lusion founder chats to Tom May about battling demons, winning awards and where digital advertising is heading
ANDREW COULDWELL
The Brit in LA discusses his new book on design systems, Laying the Foundations
Top 5 Tips For Ensuring Web Content Is Accessible For All
Merlyn Meredith outlines five top tips for ensuring web content is accessible for all
WHAT DOES THE FUTURE HOLD FOR BROWSERS?
Nico Turco examines the state of play with browsers, whether developers should encourage diversity or monopoly and how Google fits into it all
YEARS IN THE MAKING
Exclusively for net: The latest in a series of anonymous accounts of nightmare clients