Cultural Differences in Perception (04-01-13)
Prinz effectively reviews the existing research on how people from individualistic and collectivistic cultures perceive the physical world that surrounds them.
Prinz effectively reviews the existing research on how people from individualistic and collectivistic cultures perceive the physical world that surrounds them.
Hills, Noguchi and Gibbert have learned more about how people make choices.
Information collected by McGraw-Hill during its 2012 Green Schools Study indicates that there are significant benefits from greening schools.
Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate surveyed members of the Millennial generation (18-35 years old) to identify features they desire in homes.
Zillow has scientifically assessed home architecture styles across the United States.
Cultures differ in how they perceive time, and these differences should be reflected in the way options are presented to clients.
It’s not news to report that people feel that the products they own signal who they are as a person.
Humans may not be captivated by pictures of brains after all and it may not be as productive for practitioners to use neuroscience-related images in conversations with clients as previous research indicated.
Research consistently links cleanliness, or sensory experiences associated with cleanliness, such as the scents of cleaning products, to moral behavior.
Designers developing travel destinations need to know what draws tourists to an area.