1 / 22

Environmental & Physical Surroundings

Environmental & Physical Surroundings. Buildings and other structures makes symbolic statements about a culture’s status, power, values. Great Wall of China Dubai Tower ( Burj Khalifa ) Cathedrals in the Middle Ages. Architecture as a form of nonverbal influence.

nevaeh
Download Presentation

Environmental & Physical Surroundings

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Environmental &Physical Surroundings

  2. Buildings and other structures makes symbolic statements about a culture’s status, power, values. • Great Wall of China • Dubai Tower (BurjKhalifa) • Cathedrals in the Middle Ages Architecture as a form of nonverbal influence

  3. The Chinese concept of fengshuiinvolves creating a harmonious balance of energy or chi. • Arrangement of graves, buildings, furnishings based on yinand yang • Addresses or house numbers • Avoid 4 • Prefer 8 • Direction of house • Avoid facing south • Arrangement of furniture • Colors in the house Fengshui

  4. Fengshui

  5. Las Vegas Casinos • No clocks • Loud • Bright, garish décor • Gated communities • Automated gates • walls and fences • exclusive or exclusionary? Fixed features

  6. Presidential debates involve lengthy agreements that specify: • The number of debates • Locations • Staging • Question/answer format • Audience members Semi-fixed features

  7. 1973 Paris Peace Accords • North Vietnam insisted on a round table • South Viet Nam insisted on a rectangular table • A compromise was reached Semi-fixed features

  8. The design of a space can facilitate or inhibit communication, or facilitate some types of communication while inhibiting others • Disneyland • Shopping malls • Supermarkets • Planned communities • Sustainable living Designed environments

  9. The city of Fullerton and CSUF are partnering to develop “College Town.” • The vision is described as merging college life with city life. “College Town”

  10. Our surroundings affect our mood, emotions, perceptions • Maslow & Mintz (1956) compared three types of rooms: • “ugly” • “beautiful” • “average” • Participants rated photos of people more favorably when in the “beautiful” room. Everyday surroundings

  11. Traditional classroom • Desks in rows • Lectern in front • Drab colors • Encourages one-to-many communication • Large lecture halls • Fixed seating • Less immediacy • Discourages participation College classrooms

  12. the physical environment of a workplace greatly affects how its members interact, perform tasks, and socialize. The workplace

  13. millions of Americans work in cubicles • Lack of privacy • Drab, gray fabric walls • Walls discourage conversation • Phenomenon of “prairie dogging” Cubicles or “cube farms”

  14. Vinsel et al. (1980). College students’ dorm room decorations predicted the likelihood of dropping out. • Dropouts had more decorations from high school and home, fewer from the college or university. College dorm rooms

  15. Arousal • How stimulated or alert we are • Pleasure • Feelings of happiness, contentment, satisfaction • Dominance • Perceptions of power, control, status Environmental variables

  16. Sheriff Joe Arpaio, in Arizona, is known as America’s toughest sheriff. • He requires inmates to wear pink underwear. • Minor offenders live in tents. Dominance: Power and Control

  17. Formality • Warmth • Privacy • Familiarity • Distance • (Safety) Perceptual characteristics

  18. Official looking, proper, respectable • Court • Corporate boardroom • Doctors’ or dentists’soffices Formality

  19. Relaxing, comfortable, friendly • Starbucks as “home office” • McCafe • Olive Garden: “When you’re here, you’re family” Warmth

  20. Visibility to others • likelihood of being overheard • Enclosed environments suggest greater privacy • Partitions, booths, curtains, • First class cabin on airlines • Voting booths • Public restrooms • Tinted windows in cars Privacy

  21. Known, predictable • Target, Wal-Mart have consistent floor plans • Restaurant chains Familiarity

  22. Physical distance • proximity • Psychological or social distance • aloof, cold, clinical • siblings • Own room or shared? • beachgoers and spacing Distance

More Related