EEG Quantification of Green Space Benefits (06-06-13)
Environmental psychologists established long ago that walking in green spaces is psychologically restorative.
Environmental psychologists established long ago that walking in green spaces is psychologically restorative.
Researchers at Northwestern have determined that it can be better to provide non-cash bonuses than monetary ones; which has implications for performance based enhancements to individual and group workspaces.
Per capita productivity increases as cities grow.
Lin and team investigated the influence of interruptions on office worker stress levels.
Recently, a few environmental psychologists have started to focus on how the flora and fauna in our digestive tracks influence our psychological lives.
Do you find yourself worrying that data collected during programming or other project phases may be influenced by weather conditions?
Beautiful things are often preferred, and research recently completed at Vanderbilt indicates that there may sometimes be good, biological reasons for that.
Designers don’t often focus on what it’s like to experience a space when it’s dark; but the lights are not always on and the sun is not always out.
Leigh Thompson, a distinguished professor at the Kellogg School of Management, recently discussed her new book, Creative Conspiracy: The New Rules of Breakthrough Collaboration, in a blog posting for the Harvard Business Review.
Evidence continues to mount that positive distractions in healthcare environments are desirable.