The Impact of Eye Contact (10-21-13)
Environmental psychologists have, for some time, acknowledged that eye contact plays a role in forming bonds between individuals.
Environmental psychologists have, for some time, acknowledged that eye contact plays a role in forming bonds between individuals.
Cabrera and Najarian investigated the relationship between design elements in new urbanist neighborhoods and “ties that connect individuals from different . . . geographical spheres.”
Scientists have learned more about how individuals communicate via scents.
Research at Parkland Hospital in Dallas probed the effects of MRI waiting area design on the experiences of patients and visitors.
Designers should think about sound in general, not only as noise.
Spinuzzi completed a pioneering study of co-working behavior.
A recent article in Science News further indicates how our evolutionary past continues to influence our lives today.
Hirst and Humphreys conducted research illustrating an important – and generally undiscussed - way that off-site support facilities buoy strategic organizational objectives.
Researchers from McMaster University have found that there’s an evolutionary basis for the nesting done by pregnant women.
People can eat lunch in all sorts of places.