Blog Post
Jonathan_Hill
5 years agoSuper Hero
This is a fun 'bonus demo' inspired by The Cocktail Party Effect (see my post above).
We're back at Lucifer Industires (ELHC #269) , joining the staff of the most evil company in the world at the launch party for their new LMS system. You may be distracted by some of the name-dropping going on...
Demo: https://bit.ly/elhc279b
Download: https://bit.ly/elhc279bdl
I've tweaked Zsolt's JavaScript and added some conditional triggers.
If you ran this on an LMS, the learner would not be required to enter their name manually.
Outside an LMS, there's a gate screen asking for these details. For this reason I will cross-post this demo in ELHC #269 too.
We're back at Lucifer Industires (ELHC #269) , joining the staff of the most evil company in the world at the launch party for their new LMS system. You may be distracted by some of the name-dropping going on...
Demo: https://bit.ly/elhc279b
Download: https://bit.ly/elhc279bdl
I've tweaked Zsolt's JavaScript and added some conditional triggers.
If you ran this on an LMS, the learner would not be required to enter their name manually.
Outside an LMS, there's a gate screen asking for these details. For this reason I will cross-post this demo in ELHC #269 too.
- SunetSullivan-75 years agoCommunity MemberGreat demonstration of the Cocktail Party Effect. I looked at this interaction before reading your post with the article, so it was kind of cool to have this example in my head.
Something else I found interesting here was how effective the simple use of speech bubbles can be to create dialogue. Even if there is an interruption or distraction of some sort.- Jonathan_Hill5 years agoSuper HeroThanks Sunet. Yeah, there's a bit more going on here than the Cocktail Party effect.
I've also utilised the Gutenberg Diagram to place the main text in the Primary Optical Area (top left), with the 'overheard' conversation between the Strong Fallow Area (top right) and Terminal Area (bottom right). These are usually the areas of a slide that we spend most time focussing on. Had I placed the 'overheard' conversation on the Weak Fallow Area (bottom left), this probably would work nearly as well.
And you're absolutely right, it is interesting how our eyes are almost trained to follow speech boxes.- AlexanderSalas5 years agoCommunity MemberSince we are geeking out Jonathan, maybe you should check this out https://youtu.be/o4usKvgO9_s