Designing for Collaborating
Design supports collaboration when relevant research informs decisions.
Design supports collaboration when relevant research informs decisions.
The sorts of exterior and interior views that are best in different situations and what influence different types of scenes have on our thoughts and behaviors are well documented.
At their last two meetings, members of the Society for Consumer Psychology have presented research on topics that designers creating many different types of spaces and products will find useful.
Being in spaces that have more light increases energy and alertness.
Fleming has assessed the psychological implications of flexible workplaces and related management practices.
The home field advantage, or people’s tendency to perform better on their home turf, is well documented by environmental psychologists.
Mustafa and Gold investigated how residential design can support telework by interviewing self-employed teleworkers living in France, the United States, and the United Kingdom.
Bodin Danielsson and her research team studied the relationship between workplace design and perceptions of the leaders of an organization.
Adding pleasant scents to environments may not always be a good idea.
Bodin Danielsson investigated the psychological implications of lean office design.