Create an entry point in the top-left (or culturally appropriate reading start), then guide flow with steady rhythm: consistent arrowheads, equal column widths, and predictable spacing. Use Gestalt principles—proximity, similarity, and continuity—to signal grouping without extra labels. Avoid crossing lines where possible; layer relationships by separating structure views from exception views. Keep node counts per cluster modest so scanning remains swift. When hierarchy is explicit, memory load drops, and interpretation becomes delightfully mechanical rather than mysteriously effortful.
Short, action-first labels help readers decide where to look next. Replace vague nouns with crisp verbs—“Submit form,” “Verify ID,” “Queue job”—so meaning arrives before decoration. Add directional hints within captions, like “Start here,” or “Loop repeats until approved,” placed exactly where decisions occur. Keep sentence casing consistent and avoid all caps. Present acronyms only after writing them once in full. These details reduce hesitation and reinforce a steady rhythm that supports many attention styles and processing speeds.
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