7.6: Visual Hierarchy
- Page ID
- 199325
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Again, creators of visual images are in control of where the eye looks, the informative provided by the image, and the emotions evoked by the image. In his 2021 book, Techniques of Visual Persuasion: Create Powerful Images that Motivate, Larry Jordan identifies six priorities that determine the order by which information is delivered in a visual:
- Movement. Our brains are hard-wired to pay attention to anything that moves. Our survival instincts are activated. "Our first thought is, is that food, or are we food? Movement always gets our attention" (Jordan Chapter 2). The eye is drawn to movement or, in the case of still photographs, the illusion of movement. Think of what the advent of "moving pictures" (video) has done for visual persuasion!
- Focus. Next, our eyes move to focus. If focus varies within an image, our eyes travel to objects in focus. If everything is in focus, our eyes travel to the next priority: that which is different.
- Different. Different could be a different shape, a different color, a different clothing style, a different gender, etc. Our eyes are drawn to that which is unique or contrasts with the rest of the visual field.
- Brightness. If there is no movement in an image, everything is in focus, and all elements are similar, our eye turns next towards the brightest object in the visual.
- Size. The next thing our eyes our eyes are drawn to is the largest element in the image.
- In Front. Lastly, if all else is equal or consistent in a photo, our eyes tend to fall upon that which is in the front of the photo.

The photo above has several of the priorities mentioned. Most images combine multiple priorities in an attempt to increase the likelihood that the viewer's eye will go where the creator of the image wants. It is rare for only one priority to be used (Jordan Chapter 2).
When analyzing persuasive images through the lens of these priorities, it's pretty interesting to see the composition efforts that are made in order to capture our attention, and now we know that it takes only thirteen-thousandths of a second for our brains to recognize what we're seeing.