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A Room to RelaxDate: 2015-10-07; view: 828.
A room's contents can be similarly soothing—or the opposite. Neuroscientist Moshe Bar of Harvard Medical School showed subjects photographs of various versions of neutral objects, such as sofas and watches. The examples of each item were identical except that some had curved or rounded edges, whereas others had sharp, squared-off perimeters. When asked to make snap judgments about these objects, subjects significantly preferred those with curves. Bar speculates that this preference exists because we associate sharp angles with danger. “Maybe sharp contours are coded in our brains as potential threats. Filling a living room or waiting room with furniture that has rounded or curved edges could help visitors unwind,” he says.
Carpeting can also grease the social wheels. In hospitals, carpet increases the amount of time patients' friends and families spend visiting, according to a 2000 study led by health care design expert Debra Harris. Such social support may ultimately speed healing. Of course, carpeting is much harder to clean than traditional hospital flooring—and may present a health hazard in some settings—so it may not be appropriate for places such as an emergency room, where there is high patient turnover and plenty of mess. But rooms, buildings or wards that are home to long-term patients, such as assisted-living facilities, may benefit from carpets.
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