Brain Landscape: The Coexistence of Neuroscience and Architecture
John P. Eberhard
Abstract
We know as architects that the ability to measure human response to environmental stimuli still requires more years of work. Neuroscience is beginning to provide us with an understanding of how the brain controls all of our bodily activities, and ultimately affects how we think, move, perceive, learn, and remember. In an address to the American Institute of Architects convention in 2003, “Rusty” Gage made the following observations that set the core premise for this book: (1) The brain controls our behavior; (2) Genes control the blueprints for the design and structure of the brain; (3) The en ... More
We know as architects that the ability to measure human response to environmental stimuli still requires more years of work. Neuroscience is beginning to provide us with an understanding of how the brain controls all of our bodily activities, and ultimately affects how we think, move, perceive, learn, and remember. In an address to the American Institute of Architects convention in 2003, “Rusty” Gage made the following observations that set the core premise for this book: (1) The brain controls our behavior; (2) Genes control the blueprints for the design and structure of the brain; (3) The environment can modulate the function of genes, and ultimately, the structure of the brain; (4) Changes in the environment change the brain; (5) Consequently, changes in the environment change our behavior; and (6) Therefore, architectural design can change our brain and our behavior.
Keywords:
human responses to architecture,
brain controls,
neuroscience understanding,
brain control,
gene control,
environmental changes,
architectural design
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2009 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780195331721 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2009 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195331721.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
John P. Eberhard, Author
American Institute of Architects College of Fellows, Washington, DC, Founding President, The Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture, San Diego, CA
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