In our culture, dominated by shallow rationality and reliance on the empirical, measur-able and demonstrable, the embodied, experiential and mental dimensions of design are supressed. Yet, there is an interest in the possibilities of neuroscience to reveal the roles of space, form, materiality, memory and imagery in our sensory experiences and mind. Neuroscience supports the mental objectives in design, which are in danger of being eliminated in the crudely rationalized, quantified and functionalized processes of de-sign. The task of architecture extends beyond its utilitarian purposes to the existential and mental sphere. Articulating lived existential space, architecture constitutes our sys-tem of externalized order, hierarchy, memory and...
GUD (Genoa University Design): A Magazine about Architecture, Design, and Cities 7 (2023), special i...
Although we spend more than ninety percent of our lives inside buildings, we understand very little ...
As we know architecture and neuroscience were two separate disciplines, until it was found that ...
Wherein resides the ‘art’ in the ‘art of building’? Throughout history, architects have generally vi...
This chapter, written by a cognitive neuroscientist and an architect, endeavors to suggest why and h...
Argues that architect’s have a moral imperative to transform and support living conditions and recom...
Introduces some key notions of cognitive (neuro)science including mirror neurons and perceptual and ...
Reflects on the nature of human meaning making through architecture. Meaning mak-ing is understood t...
Explores the role of mood and meaning in architectural experience via the German no-tion of stimmung...
Discusses the Indian design treatise the Vaastu Veda in relation to visual neuroscience. Relates vis...
In our culture, dominated by shallow rationality and reliance on the empirical, measur-able and demo...
The founder of the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture relates the story of its in-spiration in...
The nature of human experience and the acquisition of knowledge through that experience is not just ...
In the last decade, the increasing popularity of neuroscience has involved architecture. Both neuros...
We are bodies start from other bodies. Yet, we rarely consider how our bodies extend into our surrou...
GUD (Genoa University Design): A Magazine about Architecture, Design, and Cities 7 (2023), special i...
Although we spend more than ninety percent of our lives inside buildings, we understand very little ...
As we know architecture and neuroscience were two separate disciplines, until it was found that ...
Wherein resides the ‘art’ in the ‘art of building’? Throughout history, architects have generally vi...
This chapter, written by a cognitive neuroscientist and an architect, endeavors to suggest why and h...
Argues that architect’s have a moral imperative to transform and support living conditions and recom...
Introduces some key notions of cognitive (neuro)science including mirror neurons and perceptual and ...
Reflects on the nature of human meaning making through architecture. Meaning mak-ing is understood t...
Explores the role of mood and meaning in architectural experience via the German no-tion of stimmung...
Discusses the Indian design treatise the Vaastu Veda in relation to visual neuroscience. Relates vis...
In our culture, dominated by shallow rationality and reliance on the empirical, measur-able and demo...
The founder of the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture relates the story of its in-spiration in...
The nature of human experience and the acquisition of knowledge through that experience is not just ...
In the last decade, the increasing popularity of neuroscience has involved architecture. Both neuros...
We are bodies start from other bodies. Yet, we rarely consider how our bodies extend into our surrou...
GUD (Genoa University Design): A Magazine about Architecture, Design, and Cities 7 (2023), special i...
Although we spend more than ninety percent of our lives inside buildings, we understand very little ...
As we know architecture and neuroscience were two separate disciplines, until it was found that ...