Privacy Important in the United States
People learn how privacy is managed in their society through prior experiences, and sucessful design, especially in the United States, should facilitate privacy regulation.
People learn how privacy is managed in their society through prior experiences, and sucessful design, especially in the United States, should facilitate privacy regulation.
People who see themselves as generally independent from other people think that angular shapes are more attractive, and people who perceive themselves as primarily interdependent with others find rounded shapes more attractive.
Europeans are more likely to engage in and value green behaviors than Americans.
Culture influences how we perceive situations in which we find ourselves.
People from different cultures find different sorts of arguments most persuasive.
Khan et al.’s recent study confirms that there is a cross-cultural system of odors that are perceived as pleasant.
Culture influences the actions an individual takes to feel good.
The responses of bicultural individuals to life experiences will, under different conditions, be consistent with one or the other of the cultures with which they identify.
American, English, Korean, and Japanese have different responses to color palettes representing combinations of several colors that might be used together in an interior space.
When shown images, Asians tend to focus more on the image as a whole, while Westerners are more apt to focus on foreground objects.