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Lessons Learned During the Pandemic

Lots of environmental psychology research was conducted during the pandemic and investigators largely confirmed findings from previous studies.  Data collected during the pandemic, mainly during 2020 and 2021, verified that: Ventilation has a significant...

Live a Full Life – Clutter Free – THE LONG READ

The end-of-year holiday season is an interesting time, environmental-psych wise.  When we massage our homes into just the right spaces to mingle with others and get in some badly needed time for solo revitalization,...

Designing for High-energy parties!

So far, we’ve been talking about creating a pleasant space for mingling and low-key social gatherings, not ones where people will fall asleep, but ones for pleasant, upbeat, maybe even meaningful, conversations with others....

Seasonal Scenting

When people visit our homes we want it to smell “good”—the amount of air freshener sold during the holidays, particularly of holiday scents like cinnamon-y ones, indicates that we may actually be desperate to...

Planning for Pleasant Conversations

The end of the year is the time for lots of idealized thinking about positive conversations—maybe memories of previous ones around a holiday table, planned ones with family and friends in front of a...

The Science of Hygge

At this time of year hygge gets a lot of press, and it turns out that there is a lot of scientific support for it. Penelope Green wrote an article about hygge in the...

Spiritual/Meditation Vibes

Even those of us who are not particularly religious are likely to have spiritual thoughts in conjunction with our end of year holidays.   How can you boost the “spirituality” of your home? Make the...

Resolutions you should make for the year

Looking for New Year’s resolutions to ring in 2023?  Yes?  Then resolve in the year ahead to: Cut the clutter in your home, as discussed in this article. Add opportunities to mentally refresh, as...

Why do we love the sea, lakes and rivers?

In “The Surprising Benefits of Blue Spaces” Frankie Adkins and Katherine Latham (https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20221108-the-doctors-prescribing-blue-therapy) talk about the benefits of time on the ocean and in blue spaces: “When Homo sapiens first evolved some 300,00 years...

The Science of Opera

Interested in opera and in neuroscience?  You’ll be fascinated by this article merging the two:  Frank Rose’s “Music, Science and Healing Intersect in an A.I. Opera” (The New York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/28/arts/music/artificial-intelligence-opera.html). A taste: “’We’ve...

Why we go back to places

Winet and O’Brien report that “In eight experiments with nearly 6,000 total participants, [they]explored whether people tend to prefer novel, exciting experiences, such as trying a new restaurant, or familiar ones, such as returning...

When and how to face the camera

Research by Fauville and colleagues in the virtual world is probably relevant in real life also:  “the impact of three nonverbal cues displayed through video conference screenshots (i.e., gaze direction, distance between the face...

Thinking while Standing

Bhat and associates report that “The present study investigated the effects of attending lectures in sitting and standing postures on executive function of young adults. . . .  Attending a lecture in a standing...

Seeing, Hearing birds

Hammond and team studied implications of seeing or hearing birds. They “used the Urban Mind smartphone application to examine the impact of seeing or hearing birds on self-reported mental wellbeing in real-life contexts. A sample...

Spiciness and Expectations

Wang, Yang, and Zheng studied how the the way hot sauces look how spicy we perceive them to be, determining that “red hot sauce still generates the strongest expected spiciness. Higher saturation of hot...

Managing Office Temperatures

Research at the University of California, Berkeley’s Center for the Built Environment (CBE) “found no evidence for a relationship between temperature and work performance within the range temperatures commonly found in office buildings, and certainly...

Positive Effects of At-Work Nature

Loder and Stoner reviewed studies related to nature (for example, plants, nature views) in workplaces.  They report, for example, that “Research has shown that contact with nature can improve task performance, usually through increased...

Nature Urban Strolls

Sudimac, Sale, and Kuhn share that they “conducted an intervention study to investigate changes in stress-related brain regions as an effect of a one-hour walk in an urban (busy street) vs. natural environment (forest)....

How much are views worth?

Crompton and Nicholls report that “Twenty-seven empirical studies were identified that empirically estimated the impact on property values of views of open space. The review differentiated between street level and high-rise building views. Among...

Pregnant People in Green Spaces

Sun and colleagues had “pregnant women between 8 and 14 weeks’ gestational age . . . view one of three, 5-min, VR [virtual reality] videos of an urban scene with different green space levels...

Don’t forget Fido and Fifi!

Pets or animal companions are important to many of us and we want them to live happy lives. Living a happy life, for a pet, may not mean getting to do whatever is desired—shredding...

Our fluffy friends are good for us too – says Science…!

Also, recently, another study has been published laying out how good for our mental state it is to be around pets (dogs in the case of the newest study)—a research project like this draws...

Workplace Cats and Dogs

Designing workplaces where dogs thrive (just like their owners and where both dogs and owners might potentially do their best work) is a topic that is getting or needs to get more attention in...

For Dogs and Cats

How do you design spaces that will make your moggy and pooch happy? environments (except for the much-needed retreats mentioned earlier), maybe more so than some of their human companions. Try to build in...

Considering Guests

“Visiting” season is upon us! At the end of the Western calendar year, many of us pack up our suitcases and travel to the homes of the few people who haven’t hit the road....

Reflecting Surfaces

Humans have very special relationships with shiny, reflective surfaces.  Some scientists think that this is because our sensory systems developed to find them particularly pleasant as the surfaces of bodies of clean fresh water...

Managing Sightlines

Most of us, happily, have well-functioning eyes that make it easy for us to look around us, but what are the best sightlines for us through a space? Having a sightline view of at...

Designing for Sleeping zzzzzz

Several issues ago we wrote about how design can make it easier for people to fall asleep and stay asleep (here), and designing for sleeping has been in the news recently. Would you go...

Developers are swapping to Wood

Regularly, the Space Doctors discuss the psychological benefits of being able to see at least some wood grain.  A recent article indicates that wood is currently finding its ways into lots of design solutions...

Robert Downey Junior’s home

Here in The Space Doctors’ newsletter we often talk about how seeing curves (in 2-dimensions in patterns in wallpapers and upholstery and 3-dimensions in the gently rolled arms of a sofa or walls of...
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