More Concerns About Red (05-18-10)
There is now additional evidence indicating that it may be problematic to use the color red in academic and workplace environments.
There is now additional evidence indicating that it may be problematic to use the color red in academic and workplace environments.
People who have been lead to believe that their eyes have the ability to see something often can, “counteract[ing] physiological limits imposed on vision.”
An office is an office . . . at home or at work. And distractions are distractions except . . .
Spoken language is inherently distracting.
Views of fast food and related symbols have an influence on our approach to the world around us, regardless of where we are.
A recent study of people from 60 to 80 years old found that people in this age range have difficulty ignoring distractions while they’re forming memories.
Lee and Brand have evaluated the influence of perceived personal control on perceptions of distraction in workplaces.
A team of Finnish researchers has investigated the influence of intelligible speech on cognitive performance.
All of us with healthy eyes have peripheral vision, and some designers consider peripheral views when planning spaces.
The culture we have created is now affecting our genetic evolution and influencing the ways that we interact with the world around us: “Many genes for taste and smell show signs of selective pressure,” for example.