Researchers find ceiling height can affect how a person thinks, feels and acts

Dsdsdsdsdsds
I've known people that will find a specific room based on what problem they're trying to solve, perhaps there's something to it...

"When a person is in a space with a 10-foot ceiling, they will tend to think more freely, more abstractly," said Meyers-Levy. "They might process more abstract connections between objects in a room, whereas a person in a room with an 8-foot ceiling will be more likely to focus on specifics."

The research demonstrates that variations in ceiling height can evoke concepts that, in turn, affect how consumers process information. The authors theorized that when reasonably salient, a higher versus a lower ceiling can stimulate the concepts of freedom versus confinement, respectively. This causes people to engage in either more free-form, abstract thinking or more detail-specific thought. Thus, depending on what the task at hand requires, the consequences of the ceiling could be positive or negative.


Researchers find ceiling height can affect how a person thinks, feels and acts - [via] Link.


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Posted by: Precious-Media on May 1, 2007 at 9:36 AM

And interesting article about colors, and of course something interesting about ceilings.

http://freshome.com/2007/04/17/room-color-and-how-it-affects-your-mood/


Posted by: cyenobite on May 1, 2007 at 2:45 PM

Interesting post... I just tried to think of where I could go that would have the highest ceilings... a church? What about outside where there are no ceilings? What if you were in the basement of an apartment complex and had 30 ceilings above your head? Then again, I'm probably thinking all of this because I'm sitting in a loft with a 30' ceiling :)


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