The Feed & The Thread - May 27, 2026 episode artwork

EPISODE · May 27, 2026 · 6 MIN

The Feed & The Thread - May 27, 2026

from The Feed & The Thread

We explore the tension between speed and accuracy as Jim Lewis’s research reveals AI’s tendency to hallucinate usability issues, while Gale Robins warns against treating loud feedback as automatic instructions. We also examine how low-fidelity prototypes can erode user trust and why verifying data integrity remains a manual necessity despite our reliance on automated tools. This episode challenges the assumption that technology can replace human judgment in qualitative analysis. From The Feed Your Prototype Is Not Being Honest With Your Users (And Here’s How To Fix It) ([email protected] (Eric Joseph L.)) — Low-fidelity prototypes break user trust, so high-fidelity interactions are needed to restore reality and valid data. Does AI Find Real UI Problems or Just Hallucinations? (Jim Lewis, PhD • Jeff Sauro, PhD • Will Schiavone, PhD • Lucas Plabst, PhD) — AI finds half the real usability issues but generates nearly as many false alarms, proving it cannot replace human judgment. Product discovery’s quietest, most consequential decision (Gale Robins) — Teams must filter feedback as hypotheses to test rather than automatic instructions to avoid solving the wrong problem. From The Thread My tips for identifying potential participant scammers early (r/UXResearch) — Spotting fake participants via scripted answers and timezone mismatches is tedious but essential for data integrity. I analyzed all the posts on r/UXDesign for the month of April: (r/UXDesign) — Data visualization of community chatter reveals persistent friction points rather than just flashy trends. What are the best product feedback tools? (r/UXResearch) — Feedback tools fall into three buckets: AI analysis, structured portals, and behavioral signals, requiring human judgment for validation. Today's Notable Articles Speed-to-lead is a solved problem — Ciaran Nolan AI and cognitive delegation: the hidden cost of AI that works too well — Elisa Viglianese Technical Writing in the AI Age — Geoff Graham AI & XR are made for each other 3: Reality as a Multi-Layered Canvas. — Avi Barel Whooshes, Snaps and Shaders: Adrien Vanderpotte and the Feeling of the Interface — Adrien Vanderpotte Today's Notable Discussions The AI revolution has made me grapple with my own strengths and weaknesses — r/UXDesign Designers using AI for UI/UX, what’s actually working for you? — r/UXDesign How do UX designers design their portfolio so effortlessly and effectively? — r/UXDesign Design Thinking workshop with engineers — r/UXDesign What are the best practices for setting line height for the text in a button? — r/UI_Design I've been building an app since February 2026. I just wanted to share my progress so far :) — r/UI_Design Juniors ask me anything about UX I'm the Sr Manager Product Design (Exp 10Yrs+) — r/UXDesign About The Feed & The Thread The Feed & The Thread is a daily summary of UX articles found in the industry and some light-touch updates from the UX Community found in online forums. It’s brief, and meant as a light-touch overview of what’s happening across UX.

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The Feed & The Thread - May 27, 2026

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This episode is 6 minutes long.

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This episode was published on May 27, 2026.

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We explore the tension between speed and accuracy as Jim Lewis’s research reveals AI’s tendency to hallucinate usability issues, while Gale Robins warns against treating loud feedback as automatic instructions. We also examine how low-fidelity...

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