Sensory Differences, Adults and Children (08-22-18)
Hirst and her team added to the body of evidence indicating that children and adults vary in how they experience the world around themselves.
Hirst and her team added to the body of evidence indicating that children and adults vary in how they experience the world around themselves.
There are some times when we’re much more attentive to the scents around us than others.
Fiebelkom, Pinsk, and Kastner investigated how our sensory systems work.
Anyone who’s ever been challenged by the need to identify a mysterious odor will be interested in study findings published in JAMA Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery.
The Fitwel team is making a bibliography of studies that support their program available free of charge at https://fitwel.org/resources .
Wang and Shao collected data over 30 days in a university library.
Stahlberg, Palmquist, and Nordin have learned that people with irritable bowel syndrome are also likely to have environmental sensitivities; their findings should inform the development of gastrointestinal clinics and similar spaces where concentrations of people with irritable bowel syndrome are more likely to be found.
Coutrot lead a large research team which probed how good people from various parts of the world are at wayfinding.
Castell, Hecht, and Oberfeld investigated how ceiling color influences how high a ceiling seems to be.
Peper and colleagues studied how posture influences academic performance and their findings should encourage the development of design options that make good posture more likely.