skills/flpbalada/my-opencode-config/cognitive-fluency-psychology

cognitive-fluency-psychology

SKILL.md

Cognitive Fluency - Psychology of Ease

Cognitive fluency is the ease with which our brains process information. When something feels simple and easy to understand, our minds interpret that simplicity as a signal that it must be true, safe, or worth engaging with. Clarity always beats cleverness.

When to Use This Skill

  • Designing landing pages and marketing content
  • Writing UI copy and microcopy
  • Evaluating brand names and messaging
  • Auditing content for readability
  • Optimizing conversion funnels
  • Creating training materials and documentation

Core Principle

Processing Fluency Impact:

Easy to process           →  Feels familiar
        ↓                           ↓
Feels trustworthy         →  Feels valuable
        ↓                           ↓
Higher engagement         →  Better conversion

The brain's rule: "If it's easy, it must be good."

Key Research Findings

Truth and Repetition

Finding Implication
Repeated statements feel more true Use consistent messaging across touchpoints
Simple fonts increase perceived truthfulness Choose clarity over creativity in key areas
High contrast increases credibility Prioritize readability over aesthetics
Familiar words feel more accurate Use everyday language, not jargon

Task Perception Studies

Font Impact on Task Perception:

Simple, clear font:
├── Estimated task time: 8 minutes
├── Perceived difficulty: Low
└── Likelihood to start: High

Complex, decorative font:
├── Estimated task time: 15+ minutes
├── Perceived difficulty: High
└── Likelihood to start: Low

Same instructions, different perception.

Cognitive Effort Discounting (COGED)

The brain reduces subjective value when tasks require more mental effort:

  • Processing difficulty = perceived "cost"
  • People avoid cognitive load instinctively
  • Fluent experiences create positive emotions
  • Effort required transfers to value judgment

Fluency Audit Framework

Step 1: Identify High-Stakes Content

Map where fluency matters most:

Priority Content:
├── Headlines and value propositions (Critical)
├── CTAs and conversion points (Critical)
├── Onboarding instructions (High)
├── Pricing and plans (High)
├── Error messages (Medium)
└── Help documentation (Medium)

Step 2: Apply the 5-Second Test

For each critical element:

  1. Show to someone unfamiliar with your product
  2. Give them exactly 5 seconds to read
  3. Ask them to explain:
    • What is this?
    • Who is it for?
    • What should I do next?
  4. If they struggle → rewrite for fluency

Step 3: Check Fluency Factors

Factor Check Fix
Typography Is font ≥16px for body? Increase size
Contrast Is ratio ≥4.5:1? Improve contrast
Sentence length Are sentences <20 words? Split long sentences
Word choice Would a 12-year-old understand? Simplify vocabulary
Visual hierarchy Is main point obvious? Strengthen hierarchy
White space Is content breathing? Add spacing

Step 4: Test and Measure

Metric What it Shows
Time on page Processing difficulty
Scroll depth Engagement with content
Bounce rate Initial fluency failure
Conversion rate End-to-end fluency
Task completion Instruction clarity

Common Fluency Killers

Design Problems

❌ Fluency Killers:

Typography:
├── Poor contrast ratios
├── Tiny or decorative fonts
├── Inconsistent sizing
└── ALL CAPS for long text

Layout:
├── Cluttered composition
├── Competing visual elements
├── No clear focal point
└── Walls of text

Content Problems

❌ Content Fluency Killers:

Language:
├── Industry jargon
├── Complex sentences
├── Passive voice overuse
└── Unclear pronouns

Structure:
├── Too many concepts at once
├── Buried key information
├── Missing headings/breaks
└── No logical flow

Output Template

After completing audit, document as:

## Cognitive Fluency Audit

**Page/Content:** [Name]

**Date:** [Date]

### 5-Second Test Results

| Tester | What is it? | Who for?   | Next action? | Pass? |
| ------ | ----------- | ---------- | ------------ | ----- |
| [1]    | [Response]  | [Response] | [Response]   | ✅/❌ |
| [2]    | [Response]  | [Response] | [Response]   | ✅/❌ |

### Fluency Score

| Factor     | Current | Target  | Priority |
| ---------- | ------- | ------- | -------- |
| Typography | [Score] | [Score] | [H/M/L]  |
| Contrast   | [Score] | [Score] | [H/M/L]  |
| Language   | [Score] | [Score] | [H/M/L]  |
| Structure  | [Score] | [Score] | [H/M/L]  |

### Recommendations

#### Immediate Fixes

- [Fix 1]
- [Fix 2]

#### Requires Rewrite

- [Item 1]
- [Item 2]

### Before/After Examples

**Before:** [Original text] **After:** [Improved text] **Why:** [Fluency
principle applied]

Real-World Applications

Landing Pages

Before (low fluency):
"Leverage our cutting-edge, AI-powered solution to
optimize your workflow efficiency and drive ROI."

After (high fluency):
"Get more done in less time with AI that actually works."

Changes:
├── Removed jargon (leverage, cutting-edge, optimize)
├── Shortened sentence (13 words → 10 words)
├── Made benefit concrete (workflow efficiency → more done)
└── Added relatability (actually works)

Brand Names

Research shows companies with easy-to-pronounce names:

  • Perform better after IPOs
  • Are remembered more often
  • Get recommended more frequently
  • Build trust faster
High Fluency Names:    Low Fluency Names:
├── Apple              ├── Xobni
├── Google             ├── Qwikster
├── Slack              ├── Tronc
└── Zoom               └── Quibi

Product Interfaces

Fluent Interface Patterns:

Forms:
├── One question per screen (not multi-field)
├── Smart defaults pre-filled
├── Inline validation (not page-level)
└── Progress indicator visible

Navigation:
├── Familiar patterns (hamburger, tabs)
├── Maximum 5-7 top-level items
├── Clear current location indicator
└── Predictable behavior

Integration with Other Methods

Method Combined Use
Cognitive Load Fluency reduces extraneous load
Progressive Disclosure Reveal fluent chunks sequentially
Hick's Law Fewer, clearer choices improve fluency
Five Whys Why is content not converting?
A/B Testing Test fluency improvements

Quick Reference

FLUENCY CHECKLIST

Typography:
□ Font size ≥16px body
□ High contrast (≥4.5:1)
□ Consistent hierarchy
□ Professional, readable font

Language:
□ Short sentences (<20 words)
□ Simple words (everyday vocabulary)
□ Active voice
□ One idea per paragraph

Structure:
□ Clear headings
□ Bullet points for lists
□ Plenty of white space
□ Visual hierarchy guides eye

Testing:
□ 5-second test passed
□ Non-expert can explain
□ Readability score acceptable
□ Key metrics improving

Resources

Weekly Installs
21
GitHub Stars
184
First Seen
Jan 30, 2026
Installed on
opencode20
codex19
gemini-cli18
github-copilot18
kimi-cli18
amp18