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Window views

Buying or building a home or planning to move?  If you answered yes, you’ll be intrigued by Chamilothori and teammates’ findings about how the openings (windows) in a building’s façade influence in-structure experiences. Via...

Nature Soundscapes help us focus and more…

In a recent study “EEG and Heart Rate data were recorded from 10 participants within an [real-world] office in London.  Each participant listened to a Moodsonic Soundscape (lapping lake waves) . . . and...

Headphones and Privacy

Mueller and colleagues share that “Office workers lately use active noise-cancelling (ANC) headphones to improve the acoustic situation by blocking unwanted sound. . . . Two studies were conducted to examine if ANC headphones...

Circadian Rhythms and Weight Gain….

There’s a new reason to install circadian lighting:  weight management.  Teruel and colleagues determined that “Disruption of the circadian clocks that keep the body and its cells entrained to the 24-hour day-night cycle plays...

Reduce stress – exercise outdoors!

Das and Gailey studied the implications of exercising in green spaces during the pandemic. They report that “Previous cross-sectional literature reports protective effects of outdoor exposure on mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic. We...

Music and Pain

Howlin, Stapleton, and Rooney collected information from adults experiencing acute pain.  They share that “Music is increasingly being recognised as an adjuvant [auxiliary] treatment for pain management. Music can help to decrease the experience...

Views outside help prevent us from getting lost…

New research confirms that being able to see outside as we travel through a building helps us keep from getting lost.  Qi, Lu, and Chen report that “General hospitals in China always present significant...

Colours and Concert-Halls

Chen and Cabrera studied experiences in concert halls; select surfaces were different colours for the various conditions tested.  Study participants rated “loudness, reverberance, and their visual and auditory preference for multiple virtual reality scenes...

Colour and Taste – Sweet and Salty

Wang and Chang studied colours used on popcorn packaging and report that “Four experimental package design colours (red, blue, yellow, and white) and three popcorn tastes (sweet, salty, and tasteless) were used to evaluate...

Late Night Sets

Wonder how talk shows seem to have all ended up with the same sets?  Read Jacqui Palumbo’s article in CNN style, “How the Late Night Talk Show Set Became an American Icon” (at https://www.cnn.com/style/article/late-night-set-design-history/index.html). ...

Avoid that coffee before you shop?

Biswas and team report that “Consumers often shop online and in physical stores immediately after or while consuming caffeine. This is further facilitated by the increasing prevalence of coffee shops and also with some...

The Way we Work Now…

Megan Tatum has written an interesting article for the BBC online about the importance of aligning workplace options with user mindsets (“The People Who Hate Working from Home,” 2022, https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20220616-the-people-who-hate-working-from-home).  Tatum’s article is written...

Photographing everything in your home?

I love this article. Barbara Iweins has photographed each and every thing in her home and Oscar Holland of CNN discusses her images in a recent article (“A Photographer Cataloged All 12, 795 Items...

Plants = meditation

Researchers found that looking at plants and guided meditation have similar effects on our mental state. Archary and Thatcher, investigating recovery from mental fatigue (which also degraded mood) found that “distress significantly decreased for...

Benefits of looking at art and cultural content online

Trupp and colleagues found there are significant benefits to looking at visual art and cultural content electronically, even very briefly: “When experienced in-person, engagement with art has been associated—in a growing body of evidence—with...

What do humans find beautiful?

Krpan and van Tilburg share that they “developed and empirically evaluated the Aesthetic Quality Model, which proposes that the link between [visual] complexity and beauty depends on another key visual property—randomness. According to the...

Circadian lighting and sleep

Benedetti and colleagues found that circadian lighting in offices can improve how well people sleep at night.  They “tested the effects of optimized dynamic daylight and electric lighting on circadian phase of melatonin, cortisol...

Attractiveness and scent….

Chen and Spence studied how scents influence perceptions of facial attractiveness; it seems likely that their findings can also be applied in other contexts.  The duo report they studied “whether the presentation of a...

Gardening is good for you – more evidence!

Researchers determined, via a study published in PLoS ONE, that “many people may indeed reap mental health benefits from working with plants — even if they’ve never gardened before. . . . gardening activities...

Why do we love the smell after it has rained?

Nabhan, Daugherty, and Hartung report that “Desert dwellers know it well: the smell of rain and the feeling of euphoria that comes when a storm washes over the parched earth. That feeling, and the...

Seeing Yourself Talking

Recent research related to seeing yourself during Zoom calls may be useful in other contexts, for example, when you see yourself in a mirror as you speak.  A study published in Clinical Psychological Science...

Activity-based working appeals to some more than others…

Activity-based working (ABW) is the term applied to the system which recognises the fact that people do different tasks during the day at work, and so need a mix of work settings with the...

What design features encourage active play?

Hunter and colleagues had this goal: “To identify features parents perceived as being relevant for their child’s active play, their own active recreation, and their coactivity. Parents . . . with preschoolers . ....

How to shape your products

Of course it depends on what product you are selling, but this is interesting research. Shi, Mai, and Mo report that “this research explores how anthropomorphic products’ humanlike body shapes influence consumer evaluation and...

For Room Rater fans – the back story

Are you an avid reader of the Room Rater Twitter account which scores what’s seen behind people in Zoom meetings, during video calls, etc.  Emma Goldberg (“You’re Still on Mute,” 2022, https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/19/business/wfh-setups-rto.html) interviews one...

Blue is in!

And why shouldn’t it be (always)?  Research consistently shows that no matter where on the planet you ask, people are more likely to tell you that blue is their favourite colour than any other...

Thinking while Grooving

Fukuie and colleagues report that “Hearing a groove rhythm (GR), which creates the sensation of wanting to move to the music, can also create feelings of pleasure and arousal in people, and it may...

Home or Asset?

Grant and Handelman report that “Traditionally, the home is regarded as a place of singularization that is to be aligned with the homeowner’s unique identity. This traditional meaning has come to be confronted with...

Soundscapes and Eating

Peng-Li and colleagues report that “Soft nature sounds [ocean waves] and loud restaurant noises [chattering and tableware noises] were employed to induce emotional relaxation and arousal respectively. One hundred and one healthy university students...

Safer Streets

Pappas reviewed many published studies and determined that “Visually cluttered roads, confusing signage, and broad thoroughfares that practically beg drivers to stomp on the accelerator can encourage behaviors that raise risk. . . ....

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