Airport Passenger Areas (10-22-13)
Van Oel and van den Berkhof’s research on airport passenger areas indicates that travelers want to relax and be comfortable in these spaces.
Van Oel and van den Berkhof’s research on airport passenger areas indicates that travelers want to relax and be comfortable in these spaces.
Environmental psychologists have, for some time, acknowledged that eye contact plays a role in forming bonds between individuals.
Bjornstrom and Ralston investigated the relationship between the built environment and perceived social cohesion.
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.
People can eat lunch in all sorts of places.
Daylighting workspaces and other environments has become de rigueur; the links between sunlight and performance seem quite clear.
Are new urbanist communities more diverse than others?
Researchers from Princeton and the University of California-Berkeley have investigated links between weather variability and human behavior.