Curves and Expertise
Training influences assessments
Training influences assessments
We prefer human-created to machine-generated art, except when we see robot artists at work.
Ikea recently polled people to learn more about their co-living related preferences.
Research indicates that human’s aesthetic preferences are reflected in the forms chosen for letters in alphabets and syllabaries (“in which characters represent syllables”).
Coordinating design with organizational culture sends clear signals to space users about how an organization “thinks and behaves.” It enhances user wellbeing and cognitive performance; culture-inconsistent design stresses users, compromising their mental and physical health and comfort.
Some pluses, some minuses
Wallmann-Sperlich and her team probed desk-based workers’ desires to sit, stand, and walk while working.
Who likes what varies, a lot
A research team lead by Gomez-Puerto has confirmed humans’ preference for curves.
Culture clues in workplaces