25 Jul Lesson 1: Attention as Discipline
Reference: Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker
Learning Objectives
- Train sustained observation: notice rhythm, pause, hesitation.
- Separate “what was said” from “how it was said.”
- Build a personal practice of attending before interpreting.
Headline
“Pattern appears when you stay long enough to see it.”
Narrative & UX Interpretation
De Keersmaeker’s choreography is built from repetition, variation, and the precise use of time and space. Watching her work teaches you to track micro-shifts: a held breath, a delayed entrance, a repeated phrase that suddenly fractures.
In UX research, the same discipline applies: insight often hides in timing and cadence, not in statements. The user’s pause may matter more than the answer. Attention is the first method.
Developing Critical Thinking
- Don’t jump to “why” too soon—first map “when” and “where” something shifted.
- Treat pauses and repetitions as data, not noise.
- Ask: What pattern emerges only when I stop steering?
- Compare your notes with another researcher’s—what did each of you miss?
Anchor & Process Grounding
- Anchor: Contextual Inquiry / Observational Research (NN/g).
- Grounding Move: Before every session, define which behavioural signals you will log (pauses, eye movement, return clicks). After the session, review them before reading the transcript.