Browsing Category

views

Memories, Selfies and other Photos

Selfies play a different role in our lives than other photos.  A Niese-lead team found that “When photographing moments in their lives, people can use a first-person (capturing the scene as they saw it)...

If you want a bargain, avoid long sun exposure….

Maybe some things are better off done away from daylight.  Sun and colleagues report that “We examine sunshine-induced mood and its impacts on investors’ bidding decisions in the primary market where seasoned equities are...

More on Subjective Perception

Feeling things as it turns out, relates to believing things.  Dinse, Newen, and Tegenthoff learned in a study using hypnosis that “If we sincerely believe that our index finger is five times bigger than...

Benefits of Virtual Art

Trupp and colleagues have learned that seeing art virtually shares benefits with seeing it “live”: “Brief online art viewing can significantly reduce negative mood and anxiety. . . . we used a Monet interactive art...

Adding Water

Water can be a great addition to an interior space—not the random water burbling in through a broken pipe or flooded field—but water in a gently moving desktop fountain or in an aquarium stocked...

Don’t always Follow Trends…

A lot of people make a lot of money creating and publicising trends, in design and elsewhere.  They’d like you to think that your only option as a rational human being is to follow...

Ventilating a Space!

You may or may not have much control over the ventilation where you live or work, you may be able to open or close a window or be able to change the flow rate...

Speaking and Designing

It may not seem that the language we’re speaking should have much effect on our responses to designed spaces but indeed it does. We pick up on social cues such as the language being...

Garden!

Fjaestad and team’s work confirms the value of gardening; they learned via data gathered from people 46 to 80 years old that “Compared to participants who did not engage in gardening, those who gardened...

Get your Kids into Nature

Li and Sullivan determined that when “Perceived childhood nature exposure was calculated as a cumulative score based on the perceived nature in residential surroundings from up to three childhood home locations weighted by duration...

Sunlight

Vermeer has been the darling of the art world, and loads of people outside that hallowed circle, for years, and in “Why We Want to Live (and Work) in That Vermeer Light” Emily Barger...

Plants Prevail

As they do most Springs when plants revive outside, plants inside are a hot topic. In “Eight Ways Indoor Plants Can Improve Your Home” (2023, https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20230324-eight-ways-indoor-plants-can-improve-your-home) Dominic Lutyens shares that worldwide “a trend for...

We like what we know

Darda and colleagues share that they “we explored Northern American and Indian participants’ aesthetic judgments and preferences for abstract and representational artworks. . . . no evidence was found for an ingroup bias ....

Assessing Art

Kuhnapfel and colleagues report that “in a gallery-like setting . . . we tracked movements of participants that engaged an abstract artwork. . . . moving more/more dynamically related to more reported insight. ....

Create Refreshing Views – Garden Design 101!

We’re not apt to think how our gardens can work for us, the way our home offices and kitchens do.  Your garden can refresh your mind and cut your stress levels just as it...

Biophilically Designed Gardens

The gardens that have the most positive effects on our minds and our bodies actively apply important principles of biophilic design. We have discussed biophilic design in detail in here (and search in our...

Smelling the right Smells outdoors

Gardens can be planned so that the scents that they generate serve well those that smell them.  From a psychological perspective the best scents for your garden to produce (also, the best garden-based scents...

Building in Good Neighbours!

We can build and use our homes in ways that increase our positive bonds with the people who live nearby. Sit on your front porch or steps if you have them from time to...

How to design so people… behave…!

Want people to do something particular in a space?  Sit quietly and read?  Enjoy a movie with others without interjecting comments for all to hear?  Eat using the table manners their grandmother would be...

More Benefits of Feeling Awed

We can be awed by design in a variety of ways, for example, via exquisite workmanship or use of unique or special materials. Prade and Saraglou share that “Given that awe experiences promote collective...

Building connections to Artwork

Carbon reports that “When we attend sculptures in museums, they might fascinate us due to the mastery of the material, the inherent dynamics of body language or due to contrapposto or the sheer size...

Biophilic Facades

Berto, Barbiero, and Salingaros share that “Built environments that integrate representations of the natural world into façades and interiors benefit occupant psycho-physiological well-being and behavior. However, the biophilic quality of buildings does not depend...

Virtual Reality Forest Bathing

Frigione and colleagues report that their “study investigates the effects of natural and indoor virtual environments (VREs) on psychophysiological and cognitive responses. . . . participants were exposed to two VREs (i.e., a forest...

Trees make for Safer Streets

Zhu, Sze, and Newnam report that a “street tree is considered a traffic calming measure.”  Findings from the Zhu, Sze, and Newnam study “indicate that road width, bus stop, tram station, on-street parking, and...

Confirming the Benefits of living near Green Spaces and Water

Vegaraju and Amiri found that “Living closer to outdoor spaces and water sources may reduce older people’s risk of having serious psychological distress, which can lead to mild cognitive impairment and dementia. . ....

Does where we live change our values?

Chishima and colleagues report that “person-environment fit between individual values (traditional vs. modern) and environmental characteristics (rural vs. urbanizing communities) promotes place attachment and participation. . . . we qualitatively and quantitatively analyzed one...

Sights and Sounds Interrelated!

Isaacson and team fount that when study participants “asked to choose one of three realistic or abstract paintings, evaluate their perceptual characteristics on five semantic differential rating scales and answer three questions. The participants...

Benefits of Being in a City

Movies and television shows and books and magazine articles (every sort of media, it seems) makes city living seem oh so exciting and in many ways quite irresistible.  Country living is presented as fine,...

How to Live in a City

Once you get yourself to the city, renting or buying a place, you have to spend time living there. But humans developed into their current forms living in nature. Over the aeons our brains...

Your Personality and Your In-City Home

Although there’s always the chance (day or night) to pop out of an urban residence, it’s even more important that that a home in the city aligns with your personality than that one outside...

en_GBEnglish