Design Attitudes Formed Online and Via Brands (08-14-12)
Information from we get from electronic and print media influences our sense of style.
Information from we get from electronic and print media influences our sense of style.
Research soon to be published in the Journal of Consumer Research links red and blue onscreen banners/backgrounds with specific consumer behaviors.
Many workplaces, as well as other assorted other spaces, are designed with the implicit or explicit understanding that people in them who are trying to focus their thoughts will do so while listening to something over earphones that allows them to isolate themselves from nearby others.
Hekler and his colleagues investigated “if key within-person factors (i.e., implementation intentions, social support, affect and self-efficacy) would be associated with walking and if perceived access to supportive environments (e.g., access to nice walking paths) and perceived environmental barriers (e.g., bad weather and safety issues) were uniquely associated with walking.”
Dijkstra and colleagues have identified a factor that influences how people assess abstract art.
Psychonomic Bulletin and Review recently published a study investigating the effect of coupling images with text.
House Beautiful polled Americans to learn more about their favorite colors for spaces.
Lo, Peters, and Kok investigated energy-conservation in workplaces.
Mary Immordino-Yang and colleagues have completed an analysis of existing research and conclude that “the long-lost art of introspection – even daydreaming – my be an increasingly valuable part of life.”
Researchers at New York University investigated the repercussions of particular sorts of visual experiences on future thoughts.