Making Sense of Color Tests the Bandwidth of Human Perception
Briefly

Together, all parties reveal the potential of spaces designed to satisfy not only technical parameters, ergonomics, and comfort, but also the relative indices of emotion and well-being - a neuro-architecture with inherent humanity.
Google continues its discourse on neuroaesthetics trading form for color wherein hue takes the lead, bolstered by the other senses, sprawling across roughly 6,500 square feet inside a redeveloped industrial building near Porta Venezia.
"We want to make sure that we give our guests an embodied experience. It gets you out of your cognitive mind," says Ivy Ross, Google's vice president of hardware design and co-creator of the exhibition.
As you walk through the experience, what does color feel like? Taste like? Inquiring minds encounter Chromasonic's series of 21 nodes comprising semi-transparent scrims illuminated by square LED light bars.
Read at Design Milk
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