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Yvette Granger

Managing Partner

Yvette’s background is in human factors engineering and human-system integration (HSI) research. She has designed methodologies, defined project scope, planned research activities, and supervised programs of research as well as individual research projects involving medical devices, touch screen interfaces, websites, and enterprise applications. In her most recent role, Yvette managed the Human Factors research programs for multi-million-dollar client accounts within the healthcare sector. She is a member of HFES, AAMI, and the Epsilon Mu Eta honor society. Yvette has an MS in Engineering Management with a certificate in HSI from the University of Missouri.

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Yvette

Something unique about you summed up in one sentence

I enjoy the musical stylings of Dethklok and Ed Sheeran equally

Your favorite part of working at Bold Insight

The people (this team is incredible) and the work (we make a difference every single day)!

In your spare time (or if you had spare time), you would absolutely do this:

Flip houses à la Chip and Joanna Gaines

How long have you been in the UX field?

10+ years

You cannot start the day without doing this...

Checking the weather. Living in the Chicago area has made me this way!

Your favorite city in the world is...and why?

Sydney in the Summer – the sights, the food, the ocean, and the energy!

Your ultimate celebrity dinner party guest list would include:

Barack Obama, Ozzy Osbourne, Neil Gaiman, and Terry Pratchett

Long-term personal or professional goal?

To achieve the perfect work-life balance

Read our team’s latest bold insights

Three things to improve acceptance of AI

To truly deliver on the promise of AI, developers need to keep the end users in mind. By integrating three components of context, interaction, and trust, AI can be the runaway success that futurists predict it will be.

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Recruiting methods and study logistics for human factors and user research

A stronger recruiting strategy that includes relationships with patient support groups and clinical treatment centers can provide better access to difficult-to-reach patient populations. Being intentional about how you plan the logistics of your human factors and user research can mitigate risks to validity introduced by biases.

read more