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Sela and Shiv provide insights about how environmental cues influence behavior.
Retail design can influence the ease with which customers can touch store merchandise.
Environmental psychologists long ago determined that architects and non-architects regularly respond differently to the same building form.
In experiments with native Africans who have never listened to Western music before being tested, Fritz and his colleagues found that the happy, sad, and fearful emotions expressed in the unfamiliar music could be identified by the Africans.
Researchers Yeh and Huang have uncovered patterns in floral purchases by men and women; these patterns can reasonably be expected to reflect underlying gender preferences.
Mesmer-Magnus and DeChurch have found that most teams spend their time discussing information that is already known to all members of the group and that teams that talk more with each other are less effective at completing their chosen tasks.
When pairs of people are playing a piece of music together, their brain waves are more synchronized that when they are not playing together.
Uchida feels that successful Japanese interior design reflects Japanese culture; his opinions are similar to those of many other researchers who believe that members of particular national cultures thrive in specific sorts of spaces.
People with musical training are better able to assess emotional components of sounds, such as baby cries.