An Interview with Sue Weidemann, User Advocate
Sue Weidemann, PhD, has learned a lot about creating places where people thrive, and she shared her insights during a recent interview.
Sue Weidemann, PhD, has learned a lot about creating places where people thrive, and she shared her insights during a recent interview.
Research has assessed the financial implications of adopting biophilic design into designed environments including workplaces, hospitals, retail environments and schools.
Color-related research continues to produce findings useful to designers selecting hues, saturations, and color brightness levels to encourage particular psychological effects.
This book introduces pioneering research profiling differences in how East Asians and Westerners think.
The AIA has formed a new social-media partnership, with Broadcastr, that may ultimately lead to fascinating insights on how we use and experience space.
Some individuals are more oriented toward the people in their environment and some to things.
Roenneberg and his colleagues tie discrepancies between circadian rhythms and daily responsibilities to obesity, and these circadian rhythm/daily responsibility disconnects (termed “social jetlag”) can arise through lack of exposure to natural light.
New research reiterates the important role physical gestures play in communicating information and reinforces the importance of face-to-face communication, at least until communication technology evolves to the point that gestures can be reliably shared.
Normal
0
0
1
23
132
1
1
162
11.1539
0
0
0
New research, conducted by Prof. Zheng Wang and John Tchernev (both from The Ohio State University), sheds new light on why people multi-task – it feels good.
Normal
0
0
1
16
96
1
1
117
11.1539
0
0
0
The fact that people talking on cell phones are distracted and do silly and sometimes dangerous things isn’t news.