Echoes Have a Purpose (04-07-15)
A study published in the Journal of Neuroscience indicates that the echoes inherent in most spaces serve a purpose.
A study published in the Journal of Neuroscience indicates that the echoes inherent in most spaces serve a purpose.
Wearing formal clothing has cognitive implications.
Research links depression with being at high altitude and with oxygen deprivation.
Putting trees in the right places
Behavior and perceived temperatures
What humans can see has a significant influence on how they think and act—which is why an individual’s line-of-sight, and the lines-of-sight of group members, are so important.
Study after study shares insights on how people see, hear, smell, and feel the world around themselves. Others report the emotional and cognitive implications of all that seeing, hearing, smelling, and touching. This article highlights the most important senses-related findings designers need to apply in their work.
Getting odd reports about odors in spaces or linked to objects?
Kanduri and his research team learned that listening to classical music affects the activity of some of our genes if we have an aptitude for music or we’ve had more than 10 years of music education.
Being reminded of cash makes us feel cold, so turn up those thermostats wherever cash is present, literally or figuratively, and use materials in those environments that retain heat, etc.