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This page will allow you to browse RDC's article archive of over 2,300 articles and blog posts by terms. If you would like to do full-text search on any of our content, including all our blog posts, please use the link Search for Articles.
Study after study shares insights on how people see, hear, smell, and feel the world around themselves. Others report the emotional and cognitive implications of all that seeing, hearing, smelling, and touching. This article highlights the most important senses-related findings designers need to apply in their work.
Hislop and Axtell researched working while away from home.
A study published in Current Biology indicates why it is so difficult to assess differences in items that vary on more than one parameter.
Research by Studte and her team confirms that napping during the day has benefits.
Orbach and her colleagues collected information via electronic, sociometric badges that links workplace design and employee communication.
Anthropologists at the University of California, Santa Barbara, studied the hormonal balance of men returning home.
Repositioning the distribution points for bicycles and increasing the number of bikes available could increase ridership in bike-sharing programs by almost 30%.
Getting odd reports about odors in spaces or linked to objects?
Weather can create challenges that are difficult for workplace design to overcome.
People viewing art have clear expectations for the direction of apparent motion in still images such as artwork.