There is at the present time a continuing interest in relating the behavioral sciences to design disciplines. Sociologists and social psychologists have been added to faculties of architecture schools, where they o¬ er seminars and participate as programming specialists and design critics in studio courses. Behavioral scientists in many European countries have collaborated with architects and planners in design work undertaken by governmental ministries, and more recently have been participating in the work of private design ¬ rms. Similar developments are now common in the United States.
There is at the present time a continuing interest in relating the behavioral sciences to design disciplines. Sociologists and social psychologists have been added to faculties of architecture schools, where they o¬ er seminars and participate as programming specialists and design critics in studio courses. Behavioral scientists in many European countries have collaborated with architects and planners in design work undertaken by governmental ministries, and more recently have been participating in the work of private design ¬ rms. Similar developments are now common in the United States.
One: Behavioral Constraints on Building Design 1: The Aesthetics of Function 2: Physiology and Anatomy of Urination Design Considerations for Urination 3: Cultural Variability in Physical Standards 4: Invasions of Personal Space 5: Territoriality: A Neglected Sociological Dimension 6: The Physical Environment: A Problem for a Psychology of Stimulation Two: Spatial Organization and Social Interaction 7: The Psycho-Social Influence of Building Environment: Sociometric Findings in Large and Small Office Spaces 8: Architecture and Group Membership 9: Silent Assumptions in Social Communication 10: The Social Psychology of Privacy 11: Social Theory in Architectural Design Three: Environmental Influences on Health and Well-Being 12: The Housing Environment and Family Life 13: Medical Consequences of Environmental Home Noises 14: Effects of Esthetic Surroundings: I. Initial Short-Term Effects of Three Esthetic Conditions upon Perceiving "Energy" and "Well-Being" in Faces 1 Effects of Esthetic Surroundings: II. Prolonged and Repeated Experience in a "Beautiful" and an "Ugly" Room 7 15: Grieving for a Lost Home 16: Health Consequences of Population Density and Crowding Four: The Social Meaning of Architecture 17: Images of Urban Areas: Their Structure and Psychological Foundations 18: Furniture Arrangement as a Symbol of Judicial Roles 19: Fear and the House-as-Haven in the Lower Class 20: Pecuniary Canons of Taste 21: Place, Symbol, and Utilitarian Function in War Memorials Five: The Application of Behavioral Science to Design 22: The Questions Architects Ask 1 23: The Room, A Student's Personal Environment 24: Old People's Flatlets at Stevenage 25: Typology and Design Method 26: The City as a Mechanism for Sustaining Human Contact
One: Behavioral Constraints on Building Design 1: The Aesthetics of Function 2: Physiology and Anatomy of Urination Design Considerations for Urination 3: Cultural Variability in Physical Standards 4: Invasions of Personal Space 5: Territoriality: A Neglected Sociological Dimension 6: The Physical Environment: A Problem for a Psychology of Stimulation Two: Spatial Organization and Social Interaction 7: The Psycho-Social Influence of Building Environment: Sociometric Findings in Large and Small Office Spaces 8: Architecture and Group Membership 9: Silent Assumptions in Social Communication 10: The Social Psychology of Privacy 11: Social Theory in Architectural Design Three: Environmental Influences on Health and Well-Being 12: The Housing Environment and Family Life 13: Medical Consequences of Environmental Home Noises 14: Effects of Esthetic Surroundings: I. Initial Short-Term Effects of Three Esthetic Conditions upon Perceiving "Energy" and "Well-Being" in Faces 1 Effects of Esthetic Surroundings: II. Prolonged and Repeated Experience in a "Beautiful" and an "Ugly" Room 7 15: Grieving for a Lost Home 16: Health Consequences of Population Density and Crowding Four: The Social Meaning of Architecture 17: Images of Urban Areas: Their Structure and Psychological Foundations 18: Furniture Arrangement as a Symbol of Judicial Roles 19: Fear and the House-as-Haven in the Lower Class 20: Pecuniary Canons of Taste 21: Place, Symbol, and Utilitarian Function in War Memorials Five: The Application of Behavioral Science to Design 22: The Questions Architects Ask 1 23: The Room, A Student's Personal Environment 24: Old People's Flatlets at Stevenage 25: Typology and Design Method 26: The City as a Mechanism for Sustaining Human Contact
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