Web tour: Scientific American: “Doorway effect” on memory

At first, I was skeptical of the provocatively titled recent article “Why Walking through a Doorway Makes You Forget” in Scientific American Mind Matters. Then I remembered that only a few days before, I’d gotten up from my desk in my home office to retrieve a pen on my bedside table, and upon entering the bedroom and approaching the table, I had completely forgotten why I had gone in there. Apparently, I was experiencing the “doorway effect”.

According to the article by Charles B. Brenner and Jeffrey M. Zacks, a team of researchers at the University of Notre Dame has been investigating these types of minor memory lapses. They ran a series of experiments which determined that a shift in location, which involves passing into another room through a door and doorway, causes our memory to discard recently experienced memory from the previous room in order to make room in memory for new experiences in the next room. Interestingly, our memory doesn’t seem to discard recent memory when we move an equal distance elsewhere in the same room. It’s the transition through doors and doorways into different rooms that causes the effect. Plus, it doesn’t seem to help if a shift is back into the room where the memory was encoded; we still experience a memory lapse.

It’s fun to ponder the design implications of this kind of scientific finding. Perhaps it’s a good justification for keeping a home office distinctly separate from a home’s other living spaces, lest work pre-occupations seep into family time. Or perhaps it supports more open spaces in a senior living space, such that activities undertaken in a kitchen at one end of a space aren’t forgotten in a dining area at the other end of a space.

I’d be curious to know if the experiment holds true when the doorway doesn’t include a door. What if the doorway is oversized and doorless?  Might transitions through column-supported soffits have a similar effect? The scientists note that in one of the virtual space experiments, the difference between the various rooms was reinforced by different wall patterns. What, then, if subjects were to travel between real spaces exhibiting markedly different finish treatments in which a nuanced transition is indicated by an opening in low walls with nothing overhead? Would there be a “doorway effect” beyond the transition? I’d love to know. Here’s hoping there’s more research conducted into the implications of architectural space on our thinking and behavior.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Upgrading energy efficiency in older homes

If you're an old-house owner in New England who has resolved to improve your home's energy efficiency this year, you may be wondering where to start. Enter Common Sense Preservation, a web portal created in partnership between the Newport Restoration Foundation, Preserve Rhode Island, Historic New England, and the Providence Revolving Fund.

Visit the site to find informative links for old-house owners in New England who value the historic character of their homes and hope to improve upon their homes' energy performance without breaking the bank.

Frequent House Enthusiast readers may recall my Saving old wood windows rather than replacing them post which touched on one aspect of "green" preservation. I've since discovered another relevant National Trust for Historic Preservation link in support of old wood-window restoration here. Check out the National Trust for Historic Preservation general weatherization guidelines here.

2011 may be the year you finally address those drafty windows, ice dams, and climbing heating bills -- all without sacrificing historic character or wads of cash. Go ahead; get started.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Contemporary fine-art photographers of the New England vernacular

This holiday season I offer you the gift of eye-candy from some of my favorite regional fine-art photographers. They each capture the often stark and stunning beauty of the buildings and places we know as home in New England. For a real treat, I encourage you to visit their websites and browse their online galleries.

photo by Alison Shaw, courtesy of her websiteAlison Shaw's name is familiar to many Vineyarders. She's been an inspiration since her early days in black and white.

 

photo by Ben Staples, courtesy of his websiteNorth Shore photographs by Ben Staples are riveting.

 

photo by Jeffery Becton, courtesy of his websiteDigital montages by Jeffery Becton can take your breath away.

 

"White Window" by Katherine Drew Dilworth, courtesy of her websiteKatherine Drew Dilworth's work often combines the tactile with the visual to wonderful effect. (Plus, she's a fabulous friend.)

 

"Round Church Door" by Tom Way, courtesy of his website.For years, I held on to a note card I bought which had this photo by Tom Way on the front. I simply couldn't part with the image. Who would want to?

 

"Fish Shack, Maine" by John G. Kelley, courtesy of his websiteI find John G. Kelley's photography and words particularly compelling.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Web tour: Saving old wood windows rather than replacing them

At last weekend’s symposium: “The Greenest Building is Already Built” I learned about a number of online resources which describe the unheralded benefits of restoring old, wood windows, weather-stripping them, and outfitting them with appropriate storm units instead of replacing them.

I’ve written here before about improving the performance of old, wood windows, which can be a “greener” and more aesthetic alternative to replacement windows.  But don’t just take my word for it.  The National Trust for Historic Preservation has a great tip sheet on the topic.  The U.S. Department of the Interior offers an informative Preservation Brief about it.  Apparently, this is a favorite topic of Old-House Journal's too.  They have articles here and here about it.

I was hoping to link to a graphic Old-House Journal published in their September/October 2007 issue, which illustrates four different window “tune-up” strategies and their associated annual energy savings in BTU’s, dollar savings per window (assuming gas heat at a 2007 rate), and the payback period.  I couldn’t find the graphic online, but suffice it to say that that the repaired, weather-stripped, old, wood window outfitted with a quality, storm window gives the Low-e glass, double-pane thermal, replacement window a run for its money.

Frank Shirley, of Frank Shirley Architects was awarded a 2010 BSA Research Grant in Architecture to study this issue and will release his findings sometime next month.  I’ll be sure to link to his study here when it’s available.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Web tour: NYT: Opinionator musings via Living Rooms

logo by The New York TimesHave you been following the Living Rooms series which The New York Times launched in June? It explores my favorite topic -- home: how it reflects who we were, are, and aspire to become. 

Most recently, author Elizabeth Hawes wrote in “Our Buildings, Ourselves” about her lifestyle change when she moved from an elegant Upper West Side c. 1908 apartment house to an expansive Tribeca loft, built a couple of decades earlier. In her tale of a well-heeled life, home is an opportunity to sample an alternative identity. The same could be said for another post “How the West Won Me” by author, New Yorker Winifred Gallagher about her vacation home in Dubois, Wyoming. 

In “Home for Life” author Allison Arieff writes about the impact of the recession on our perceptions of home as a place to live among a community, rather than as a real-estate investment. Her choice of home, like those of Hawes and Gallagher, offers insight into her priorities, and, ultimately, who she is too.

Sometimes the best way to get to know folks is to visit their homes. Short of that opportunity, their descriptions of their homes may be the next best thing (especially if they're authors).

Read my review of Winifred Gallagher’s House Thinking here and catch my thoughts on my home here.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast