Surface Colors and Perceived Weight (12-09-16)
Research by Sunaga, Park, and Spence confirms that, all else being equal, things that are painted lighter colors are perceived to weigh less than items painted darker colors.
Research by Sunaga, Park, and Spence confirms that, all else being equal, things that are painted lighter colors are perceived to weigh less than items painted darker colors.
Li and Joh have identified a relationship between home values, the bikeability of neighborhoods, and the presence of viable public transit.
Soderlund has identified good reasons for making sure retail employees are visible to shoppers.
Coulter has found that we have a different response to material reviewed on mobile devices and on desktop/laptop computers.
Research by Tamesue confirms that meaningful office noise degrades professional performance.
Radermacher and her colleagues probed links between office design and recruitment of employees.
The US Department of Veterans Affairs reports that it has linked architectural/interior design consistent with the recommendations embedded in its Mental Health Environment of Care Checklist to fewer suicides by inpatients in its mental health units.
Kim and team found via a study analyzing over 11,000 single-family home sales in Austin, Texas that house prices are affected by nearby trees.
Harold, Lorenzoni, Shipley, and Coventry investigated how to best display scientifically derived information to non-scientists.
Researchers at NYU’s Langone Medical Center have published research in Nature Neuroscience detailing how information collected via other senses influences our interpretations of what we hear.