Regret and Temperature (10-07-16)
Feeling regret for taking a particular action leads people to prefer particular temperatures.
Feeling regret for taking a particular action leads people to prefer particular temperatures.
Whether a diagonal line seems to go up or down as it moves to the right has psychological repercussions.
Designers are regularly asked to create objects and spaces that may help build trust among users.
Greenwood and Gatersleben investigated cognitive restoration among teenagers.
Product recognition and purchases may not be related as you would expect.
Work by Constable and her team sheds light on how our social world influences how we act in the physical one.
Sabine Kastner, a psychology professor at Princeton, has found that visual clutter impedes professional performance.
A new way to measure noise
Being watched and monitored changes actions
Seeing eyes alters thoughts and behaviors