About

Practice Intuition
Designing for many kinds of intelligences through the lens of human systems - perception, cognition, movement, behavior.
A Human-Centered Design Think Tank - The Specialization of the Generalist
My career has moved between worlds that rarely talk to each other: biomedical engineering (BS BME), emergency medicine (EMT), physical therapy (PTA), software development (AWS), product management, and human factors research (MS HFID).
What once looked like a scattered path became a pattern.
Studying human movement and biomechanics reveals how perception begins from the ground up.
Studying cognitive science, behavioral research, and UX reveals how meaning is shaped from the top down.
Between these two layers lives the space where real design happens.
MISSION:
To design products, research, and systems that align with how humans (and other kinds of minds) actually perceive, move, and make decisions in the world.
WHAT WE DO:
Practice Intuition explored human-centered design at the intersection of:
- biomechanics and movement science
- cognitive science and behavioral research
- human factors engineering & interaction design
- systems thinking and product development
- applied human ecology and systemic ecological dynamics
Our work includes research, design strategy, and product consultation grounded in embodied cognition and real-world user experience. From research to launch, we have experience across the PDLC to create factored perspectives on users and products.
PHILOSOPHY
Humans are not just cognitive processors or mechanical bodies. We are dynamic systems continuously interacting & co-creating with our environments. Design should reflect that reality.
BACKGROUND
Experience across emergency mdicine, rehab & performance, usability research, software development, and product design informs a unified approach to understanding human behavior.
What appears like a nonlinear career path has ultimately converged into a single question:
How do we design systems that work with human perception, movement, and cognition - not against them?