Ownership and Culture (10-01-14)
Gjersoe and her team have learned that our national culture influences how we respond to objects.
Gjersoe and her team have learned that our national culture influences how we respond to objects.
Cultures vary in intriguing ways
Insights on creating for cultures
Research completed at the Rotman School of Management highlights the social implications of living in a “tight” or “loose” culture.
Tomovska-Misoska and her research team establish consistencies between the responses of Macedonian knowledge workers to the design of workplaces and those of employees in other countries.
Researchers have identified an important difference in the reason people from Korean and American cultures personalize their cell phones; their work has implications for the personalization options and process provided for any designed object/location.
Researchers from the Netherlands and Sweden have confirmed that cultures develop languages that vary in their attention to various sorts of sensory stimuli.
Culture influences effect of expansive postures on perceptions of power.
Sitting in an expansive posture has previously been linked with feeling powerful.
Ishii and her team had Japanese and European American adults and children (aged 4-6) use crayons to color in a standard geometric pattern supplied to them and indicate preferences for colorings done, in general.