Location and Personality (02-27-18)
Wei lead a large team which learned that where we grow up seems to influence our personality as adults.
Wei lead a large team which learned that where we grow up seems to influence our personality as adults.
Being raised near greenspaces is good for children’s brains.
Tian, Ding, Teng, Bai, and Poeppel’s research indicates that evaluations of loudness may not be as objective as they seem.
Research by King and colleagues makes personality-based design more reasonable in workplaces and elsewhere.
The Consiglio lead team, via a series of studies in lab and field settings, investigated the effects of social density on communication.
Reich, Kupor, and Smith learned that items made by mistake may have higher value than those created intentionally.
Schneider and team have found that the pride people anticipate feeling after taking an environmentally responsible action is more likely to encourage green living than the anticipated guilt of not living in an Earth-friendly way.
Sometimes, it’s desirable for customers to feel crowded in a store, and retail spaces can be sized accordingly.
Jeanne Tsai conducts culture-based research on emotions and her findings are useful to anyone attempting to develop places or objects that support desired emotional experiences.
Buechel and Townsend investigated how people decide which products to buy and the repercussions of those decisions.