Older Adults Living Apart Together (02-08-17)
Benson and Coleman have found that more older adults are choosing to “live apart together;” this new way of “co-habitating” has repercussions for home design, for example.
Benson and Coleman have found that more older adults are choosing to “live apart together;” this new way of “co-habitating” has repercussions for home design, for example.
A team lead by Hung confirmed that particular sorts of sounds are linked to certain shapes; their work is useful to people naming products and places, for example.
Liou and Lan investigated “cultural differences in creative behaviors.”
A team of British researchers, Gardner, Smith, and Mansfield, studied the general public’s response to research encouraging people to spend less time sitting at work.
Kaiser, Schreier, and Janiszewski link product customization and enhanced performance.
Wang, Krishna, and McFerran studied how consumers’ environmentally responsible behavior is affected by the actions of organizations.
Currie studied how the design of small urban parks.
Brookfield probed how resident preferences align with neighborhood design elements that have been tied to walkability.
Barnes and Wineman investigated employees’ bonds to their workplaces.
Ellard and his team reported on their work at the 2016 Psychology of Architecture conference.