The tastes of architects don't always match up to those of the people who actually inhabit a building. Anjan435 explains the psychology behind why this is.
People’s psychological and neural responses to the built environment fall along three dimensions—coherence, fascination, and hominess.A preference for fascination emerges quickly, but to appreciate a sense of hominess requires more time.
responses to the built environment fall along three dimensions that are typically correlated with how well people feel. These dimensions are, a complexity that invites exploration; andcertainly scores highly on all three dimensions. , we predicted that architecture and design experts respond along these dimensions differently than people without formal training. For architectural interiors, we found that experts and design novices experienced hominess similarly.
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