Colours and Colour Vision: An Introductory Survey
Interesting overview of the technical aspects of color vision
Interesting overview of the technical aspects of color vision
Ornaments have both fans and enemies. Some people encourage their use, while others consider ornaments design corrupting gewgaws. This article focuses directly on how ornament design can enhance mental and physical wellbeing.
Our skin is our largest sense organ and no matter where we are or what we’re doing, all of it’s collecting info and sending it to our brains for processing. After our brains are done assessing and analyzing them, touch-related inputs inform our thoughts and behaviors.
In September, 2016, the Design and Emotion Society met in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, for its biennial conference. Discussions at scheduled sessions and during impromptu conversations focused on a range of intriguing experience-design related issues.
The Center for Health Design (CHD) has prepared an excellent toolkit for people conducting post-occupancy evaluations (POEs).
Researchers at NYU’s Langone Medical Center have published research in Nature Neuroscience detailing how information collected via other senses influences our interpretations of what we hear.
Otten and her team have learned more about how our eyes work; their findings have implications for the design of visual experiences.
People speaking the same language perceive odors in similar ways when the names of scents smelled are known.
Lee, Jung, and Chu have researched design elements linked to environmental responsibility.
Researchers from University College London have learned more about how non-visual experiences influence whether people’s circadian rhythms are synchronized with their location on the planet.