“UX/IQ: Intelligent Experience Design” argues that today’s digital systems are function-first, not feeling-first—they remember your last click, not your current mood, stress level, or context. You’re not asking for a slick interface or chatty assistant—you want systems that respond, not just react. The missing piece? A perceptual “intelligence” layer—quiet, ambient, always observing between you and the machine. Not voice, not a persona. Just real-time sensory fusion (audio, motion, thermal, etc.), behavioral modeling, edge-based ML, and heuristic logic driving an adaptive, emotionally attuned UX.
Proposed Human centered use cases: 1. Stress-Aware Commute 2. Passenger Focus Mode 3. Family Road Trip 4.
- How multisensory design (sound, light, haptics) creates deeper emotional impact in vehicle interiors.
- Why “beyond screens” thinking is critical as cabins become the primary product in autonomy.
- Practical use cases where adaptive interiors reduce stress, boost focus, and build passenger trust.
- Design methods for blending brand storytelling with sensory intelligence inside the vehicle.