Patterns, patterns everywhere we look, but how should we use them?
How does seeing patterns influence us psychologically?
How does seeing patterns influence us psychologically?
Recently there’s been a lot of focus on creating spaces in which people with low or no vision can be comfortable.
Squares and rectangles and polygons, oh my!
People respond to places and things intellectually, emotionally, and with varying degrees of pleasure.
People have different emotional responses to various white-based shades.
In October 2011 a team of professionals (architects, campus administrators, and higher education association leaders) met with students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison “to consider the relationship between physical place and campus community.”
Design decisions influence the moods of the people who ultimately use objects and spaces. What moods do those users desire?
A study conducted by Chang and Pham, soon to be published in the Journal of Consumer Research, provides insights on the factors that guide decisions, particularly those made “when the outcomes are closer to the present time than when they are further away in the future.”
Recent research indicates how significantly different a person’s self concept can be at home and at work.
We have new findings tying cues in the physical environment to particular ways of thinking