Open Offices for Academics Don’t Get Good Grades (04-27-12)
Baldry and Barnes investigated the implications of providing academics with single person offices with floor to ceiling walls and a full height door that can be closed or open offices.
Baldry and Barnes investigated the implications of providing academics with single person offices with floor to ceiling walls and a full height door that can be closed or open offices.
Research presented by Chris Pawson, Sarah Doherty, Laura Martin, Ruth Soares, Caroline Edmonds, and Mark Gardner on April 18 at the British Psychological Society’s annual conference indicates that human cognitive performance is influenced by hydration.
Griffiths and Gilly have investigated territorial behavior at third places and more specifically how they might arise.
Research by Banerjee, Chatterjee, and Sinha may explain otherwise puzzling findings related to the perceived brightness of an environment.
Maria Larsson of Stockholm University investigates links between scents and memories.
Cain’s recent book, Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking, is drawing a lot of attention to the influences of personality on human experience.
An interational movement is developing to design houses that are home-y and also tiny.
Museums provide a space for patrons to think, reflect and ponder.
People developing spaces and objects for which smell and color are both important have more information to aid in their work.
How does street design influence the activities of humans along that road?