Freakonomics Radio - 529. Can Our Surroundings Make Us Smarter?
Episode Date: January 5, 2023In a special episode of No Stupid Questions, Stephen Dubner and Angela Duckworth discuss classroom design, open offices, and cognitive drift. ...
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Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner.
You may or may not know this, but I've been cheating on you every week.
Along with making Freakonomics Radio, I make another show called No Stupid Questions with
my friend Angela Duckworth.
She is a research psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania.
She's also the author of the book Grit. And as you will hear today, she's just a lot of fun to talk to. Every week, we try to answer
one question about psychology or society or human nature, really anything that catches our interest.
We started No Stupid Questions a couple years ago, just as an excuse for me to hang out with Angie
once a week. Since then, it has become one of the most popular shows in the Freakonomics Radio network. So,
if you are not listening yet, maybe you should be. What you're about to hear is a brand new episode
of No Stupid Questions, and I hope it will inspire you to follow or subscribe to the show
in your podcast app. One big difference between this show and Freakonomics Radio is that
No Stupid Questions is really just a conversation, which is why, as you'll hear, we have a fact
checking section at the end to catch our mistakes. With Freakonomics Radio, we do fact checking all
along the way during the whole production and interview and editing process. That doesn't mean
we never make a mistake in Freakonomics Radio, but we do catch most of them before you hear the show. Thank you. for listening. And again, I do hope you'll also start listening to No Stupid Questions every week.
I also feel better now that I've told you about my infidelity. It's a good way to start the new year with a clean conscience. 88% of elementary school teachers encourage their students to hold
their pee. I'm Angela Duckworth. I'm Stephen Dubner. And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, how does the built environment affect human behavior? It does not matter to him
whether it's 100 degrees or 50 degrees, whether a building is designed well or whether it's a cave.
When he's doing his work, it just doesn't matter.
Angela, good morning.
Good morning, Stephen.
We have an email here that I think you're going to find particularly interesting.
It is from one Yildiz Bashol.
She writes to say, Dear NSQ team, I am an architecture student at the Technical University of Munich in Germany, and I find it fascinating how the built environment affects us. I would have to agree here with Yildiz. It is
fascinating how the built environment affects us. Agree. Furthermore, she writes, I have read a few
papers about how children perform academically better in some school environments compared to
others and would love to hear your opinions about it.
I believe in using this power of architecture and design to help improve lives,
since a good education has such huge potential benefits on an individual but also on a community level. That's what economists call a positive externality. The more people get educated,
the better it is for everybody. I have decided, she writes, to focus on designing a primary school for my master's
thesis that shares its facilities with the community, offers adult education classes,
and acts as a neighborhood center. So, she writes, my question is, does the built environment affect
our lives more than we realize? Can architecture really make us happier and more successful as we designers would like to believe?
So, Angela, let's start with the basic assertion here, especially the one that falls into your wheelhouse.
Is it true, as Yildiz says, that there is research showing that children perform academically better in some school environments?
There is research on exactly that question, but I think long before there was
social science research on whether or not the design of your classroom or your school building
influenced your academics, there was an intuition. What architect does not think that there's some
influence of the built environment on psychology? I mean, look at all the religious monuments and
temples throughout history. Think of the Parthenon. Think of every state house that was ever built.
I'm sure you know this better than I do, like the famous Winston Churchill quote about the
architecture of Parliament. I think the direct quote is, first we shape our buildings,
and afterwards our buildings shape us. The context
of this was that I think, and you know I'm not a student of history, but Parliament had been
bombed, I guess. I think it's World War II. And it was under Winston Churchill's watch that it had
to be rebuilt. And so architects came forward with a number of plans, you know, should it be
like a circular shape? Should it be oblong?
And these various plans had little line drawings
of where people would sit in the building.
And since the British system was a two-party system,
Churchill maintained that they should rebuild Parliament
exactly as it had been,
with benches for one side facing the other.
But he felt like that kind of dialogue, the
oppositional, like, I need to face you, was elemental. What I've read about that, and I have
attended on Wednesdays, there's what's called Prime Minister's Questions, where the Prime Minister
actually sits on the bench there and fields questions. And the opposition, as you said,
they're separated by not very far. They are face-to-face so that
their spittle actually hits each other. And I've always heard that the idea was if you want a
government that is accountable to the other side, then it really makes sense for them to face each
other and air their grievances and so on. The idea being that it will somehow produce a more civil
discourse. I have to say, as anybody who's watched any prime minister's questions or
parliamentary debate, it doesn't work. I don't know if it's supposed to be civil,
though. I think it's supposed to be antagonistic. I think actually it's supposed to be productive.
The explanation that I heard was that, again, an accountable government, you want to face the
charges and defend them. I mean, I think the example you're giving is a good example of how architecture influences
behavior, but not always, perhaps, the way the architect imagines. There's another example I
think of. You've been to the Vatican, I assume? I have been to the Vatican.
So, you know, when you walk into St. Peter's Square there, there are these two big rounded
colonnades or rows of columns that are meant to, as I've read, at least architecturally,
feel like arms welcoming you into the fold.
This is, I am the Lord your shepherd welcoming you into the fold of the church.
Long before I knew that was what it was supposed to represent, when you walk in there,
it's an overwhelming feeling of awe. Maybe some would feel comfort. But it is, look,
we've firmly established that architects do stuff on purpose and we respond to it, right?
We do have that as a kind of given. And then the question is, you know, are they right? Because they could be wrong. There's an article that was published
in 2015 called The Impact of Classroom Design on People's Learning, Final Results of a Holistic
Multi-Level Analysis. Pretty sexy title there. That is sexy. Equally sexy journal called Building
an Environment. And the authors are several, but I think the most senior author on this is Peter Barrett, who was the founding director of this thing called Salford's Research Institute for the Built and Human Environment.
And what this study did, it's not random assignment. I guess it's in theory possible to randomly assign kids to go to different classrooms and different schools and also to have random assignment of architectural styles. So the big caveat on this is that it's a correlational
study. But that said, it's 153 classrooms in 27 different elementary schools, or I guess they
call them primary schools in the UK. And the aim was to identify, this is a quote, the impact of the physical classroom
features on the academic progress of the 3,766 pupils who occupied each of those specific spaces.
Okay, great.
And very specifically, the report concludes that seven key design parameters were identified
that collectively explained 16% of the variation in pupils'
academic progress achieved. So, in other words, there is an effect of architecture if you, you
know, trust these correlational findings. And when you ask the question, like, well, how much is
16% of the variation? Is that a lot or a little? I can tell you that it's a lot. Most interventions
have a fraction of that effect. So, there's something going on here if, you know, it is all about the architecture and not something that correlates with the architecture, like how wealthy that school district is. But if you take it on face value, you have to say, wow, what are these seven key design parameters?
Yeah, Angie, what are these seven key design parameters? polluted, that's all kind of mimicking in a way being outside on a nice day. And that actually
turns out to be about half of the effect of the built environment when it comes to classrooms.
And it's also what the researchers say that everybody thinks about, right? When you think
about a wonderful classroom, maybe your own primary school classroom and how it may not have
been ideal, very often people think like, was there light? Was it too cold or too hot?
And was it like stifling?
Basically, was there a lot of fresh air?
Right.
Okay, so the other four factors are as follows.
So first I'll give two that they would call stimulation.
There's color and complexity.
And here color is the variety, the brightness of the colors,
like how much color is there.
And complexity is just like how much crap there is.
And the interesting thing about complexity and color, these two features of stimulation, is it's kind of like a Goldilocks story.
It's really important that you don't have too much color or, you know, too much crap in the classroom, but also not a monochromatic classroom or one where there's nothing on the walls.
And the final two features fall into what they call individualization.
So individualization includes ownership and flexibility.
Ownership, the researchers define, is basically your ability as a student
and also as a teacher to, like, customize the classroom with things that are unique to you,
kind of like when teenagers decorate their own bedroom. And flexibility is, is everything just fixed or is there some opportunity to flexibly rearrange
chairs or boards or anything else so that you can have roundtable discussions when you need them,
but, you know, line things up for a speaker when they come in. So, you know, collectively,
that's the story that they want to
tell. Half of the effect of the built environment being about naturalness, and then the other half
being almost evenly split, maybe a little bit more for individualization, and then finally
stimulation. So, I will say anyone who already appreciates design or architecture even a little bit will say, well,
yeah, like no kidding. Like it took all these academics to find that the design and architecture
of a place really matters. But your argument here is that not only does it matter in terms of being
more pleasant, perhaps, but it does seem to affect individual performance for schoolchildren,
right? Even though it's correlational and not causal necessarily.
Yeah. So if we give them a pass on random assignment and experimental design,
I think the surprise in this might be, but really their actual academic achievement,
really? Like, yeah, I can understand them being, I don't know, in a better mood, less cranky. I have to say, it doesn't surprise me. I do think back to this study from a long time ago
that we discussed in an episode of Freakonomics Radio called Please Get Your Noise Out of My Ears.
It was about noise pollution, essentially. There's a woman named Arlene Bronzaft, who is
a sound scholar, I guess, in New York City. There was a study that she had run years
and years ago, and it was very unscientific. You'll understand as soon as I tell you why.
There were complaints from a school in the Bronx that some of their classrooms were right next to
the elevated subway, and it was really, really noisy. And there were parents, I want to say,
who were trying to get this changed, but they wanted some evidence. So Arlene Bronzaft came in to do a study.
And the study she did measured academic performance in the classrooms that were right next to
the elevated subway and similar classrooms on the other side of the building that didn't
have the noise disruption.
Now, you can imagine the many reasons why that may not be purely scientific.
We don't know whether those two
sets of classrooms were what you people call observationally equivalent and so on.
Yeah.
But she did find that there was something like a full grade level of math achievement different
in the noisy rooms versus the quiet rooms. Now, I don't know about you, Angela. I am sensitive to
my environment. I know people, however, who are not. Like Steve Levitt, my Freakonomics buddy, he claims that it does not matter to him whether it's 100 degrees or 50 degrees, whether it's noisy or not noisy, whether a building is designed well or whether it's a cave, that when he's doing his work, it just doesn't matter.
I have a hard time believing it, but maybe that's just because I am more sensitive to environment.
What about you?
I have a hard time believing it doesn't affect Steve Leavitt at all.
It strains imagination to think that if you are trying to write a paper
and your kids are like in the next room or anything that would be disrupting your attention.
However, it does not strain my imagination to think that he's pretty good relative to other
humans. A low level of distractibility, you're saying? I mean, I'm like him, I think. So Jason,
my husband, has this complete inability to focus when there's anything distracting, like a TV on.
Just this morning, there was this like beep in my house and I couldn't figure out where it was.
And I was like, is there a fire alarm?
And I spent a few seconds trying to figure it out.
And then I just like went back to my work.
Every few seconds, it's like beep would go off.
Jason, meanwhile, would have torn down the walls looking for the beep.
Jason's head would have exploded.
So I think there's a continuum and maybe students too vary in how influenced they are.
Absolutely.
It sounds like you and Steve Levitt are pretty good at tuning out a lot of things.
It sounds like Jason and I are not.
I am curious to know how our listeners feel about this.
I almost feel we could make it a team sport here.
Are you team Angela or are you team Steven?
Wait, what's my team?
Team Angela, she can really work through anything. She is not easily distracted.
Why do you call that team Levitt? I just spent a good portion of my oxygen trying to say that
the built environment really does matter. So why do you make that team Levitt?
Fair enough.
Because he's not here to defend himself.
Team Levitt is, it doesn't matter if you're in a 100-degree cave or a 62-degree high-rise office. You're just going to focus on your work and get it done. Or are you Team Dubner, which is, I'm like the princess and the pea. If there's a little bit of a beeping, like when I go to the gym, I often bring reading to the gym and I ride a bike and read. But if I'm in there reading and someone has left a TV on,
even with no sound, I can't even read if those MSNBC shouters are shouting at me with their
open mouths. That's how sensitive I am. So I would like listeners to tell us, are you someone whose
environment really affects their ability to work and affects their mood a lot or much less so, much more like
Levitt. Use your phone to make a voice memo. It's very easy. And email it to us at nsq
at freakonomics.com. We may play it at the end of the next episode.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions, Stephen and Angela discuss what modernist author Virginia
Wolfe had to say about how people's environments affect their productivity.
Everyone who's listening to us should quit their jobs and become writers and work on their own,
correct?
Now, back to Stephen and Angela's conversation about how physical space affects personal success.
I remember the first time I heard this phrase was about 15 years ago. The minute I heard it,
I thought, oh, that's what I need to avoid whenever possible. And the phrase was cognitive drift.
You're familiar with this phrase, I assume?
Cognitive drift. I can figure it out from context clues, but what is it? Just that your mind wanders? how his hospital processed, analyzed, stored, and then made available to the medical staff
information from all different areas of the hospital. In other words, if you're working
in the emergency department and someone comes in there with a head trauma, let's say, one of the
things you want to know is, have we seen this patient before? If so, what did we see this patient for?
If we saw that person before, was their imaging done?
If there was, let me take a look at that imaging now.
It's like basically so the left hand
knows what the right is doing.
Basically just having access
to all the information you'd want.
As he was describing it,
cognitive drift is what happens
when you don't get the information you want
in a relatively short amount of time.
And believe me, the amount of time is really short. And it doesn't take long for the average
brain to get distracted, to start thinking about something else, to start wanting to try a
different problem and so on. And so, the big problem he was trying to solve was to make
all information available anywhere instantly. But the thing that really captured me was this notion of cognitive
drift. I began to realize that I'm encountering it all the time. And so for me to work well,
I need to be in an environment where I minimize the possibility of cognitive drift. And when you
think about that, it's not only the built environment, not only the physical space and
the flow and the light, but some of
these other things that we've been touching on, like noise pollution and light pollution,
and even things like if you're working at a desk or a table.
It's too cluttered or it's too small.
I think for all the talk about how exciting it is for ideas to collide. This was the idea behind the open office that
was thought to be a miracle. If we put all these people together, then just imagine how these
amazing creative ideas. It'll be like a, you know, tsunami of creativity.
We did an episode related to this as well. It was called, Yes, the Open Office is Terrible,
but It Doesn't Have to Be. And we looked at a paper which found that a few big companies, Fortune 500 companies,
who'd switched from cubicles, meaning semi-closed, to an open office plan with the hopes of increasing
employee collaboration, they found that the openness actually led to less collaboration.
Why would that be?
They basically found that when you put people in an open office, they're prone to Slack or email each other much
more. Out of consideration, probably, right? Absolutely. Because you can't have one conversation
in an open office without it being everybody's conversation. Also, think about it. If you and I
were wanting to collaborate on some project and we were hashing it out, like it's not ready for prime
time. Do we want to do it right here and now in front of people who are listening? Or do we want
to just shoot the crap on a phone call or an email? Because, you know, the exchange of ideas,
you don't necessarily want to put yourself up for criticism right away. But I will say we're
seeing a very, very interesting moment now that there's a return to the office post-COVID.
A lot of people don't want to go back.
Those that do want to go back do not necessarily want to be in an open office anymore because having worked at home for a long time and had a little bit of privacy.
Probably like foregrounds how awesome it is to actually have a room of your own.
Speaking of which, a room of your own.
Speaking of which, a room of one's own. That was Virginia Woolf's way of saying how important it is if you're a writer, especially a female writer in early 20th century England.
So I was assigned a room of one's own, and there is a passage. It's just this indelible
image that when you're thinking of something, it's like a fish. You can see a flash of the fish under the water and you're trying to catch it on your line.
And maybe, maybe if you're lucky, the idea will catch on the line of your thought.
You have to have patience and, you know, just like a good fisherman, try to reel it in, but not too fast.
And then what Virginia Woolf goes on to say is that if somebody says like, hey, you, you by the pond, you need to move over here.
Any kind of interruption, the fish will run and hide and it will basically escape you.
There is absolutely a ton of research showing that when you're by yourself in a room, your ability to follow your own line of thought, to concentrate. It's just easier when you have a
room of your own. And Virginia Woolf would add, as she does in this essay, ideally a room with a lock
on the door. So your message, if I'm hearing what you're saying properly, is that everyone
who's listening to us should quit their jobs and become writers and work on their own with a locked
door, correct? Well, no, I don't want you to take that. And especially because this question started off with schools and classrooms.
So wait, I misinterpreted.
You're saying that all children.
We should lock all children in their own room.
No, no, no.
That would be cruel.
I'm saying that all children should quit school and go home,
lock their door and just do their thing and everything will be better.
That's what the pandemic was, Stephen, right?
And it didn't work well.
Oh, my gosh. I have done research on this
and actually I have a paper that I haven't yet published,
but unequivocally when kids were completely
in their bedrooms, in other words,
they were not in any hybrid model.
So wholly being schooled at home,
their wellbeing dropped on literally every question
I could ask.
But the paper that I haven't yet published
also shows that there was a cost to their academics. So if you look in a school district where they had fully
remote kids and then fully in school, the kids who were at home in their bedrooms, you know,
that's a room of your own. But they suffered. So I think the moral of the story of the pandemic,
and if you put it together with this new research on classroom design, is that there is a time
and we need a place for solitude. And that is for concentration and keeping the fish on the
line of your thought. But I think there's also a time and we need a place for community and that
the architecture also has to accommodate. And that, to be fair, is exactly what Yildiz is talking about
in this note. She's saying that she wants to build not only a primary school, but she wants it to
share its facilities with the community, offer adult education classes, and act as a neighborhood
center. The NYU sociologist Eric Kleinenberg, he wrote a book called Palaces for the People.
You think about old public libraries, YMCAs, things like that.
So he discusses what he calls social infrastructure for public and accessible gathering places.
And he's made the argument that as more and more of those kind of spaces disappear in
favor of more private market solutions, that when the social infrastructure gets degraded,
he writes, the consequences are unmistakable. People reduce the time they spend in public
settings and hunker down in their safe houses. Social networks weaken, crime rises, older and
sick people grow isolated, distrust rises, and civic participation wanes.
Wait, Stephen, I need to ask you, was that written before or after the pandemic?
Because I think-
That was before.
That is a strikingly accurate narrative of what happened in the pandemic.
And it really goes to Yildiz's larger point, which is not just that architecture and design
matter, and not just that they matter for a school, but they would probably behoove all of us to think a little bit more about how they matter
for society and how we live. I mean, you've talked me out of the fact that most people
should quit their jobs or quit school and go be alone all day, like I do. So I accept that.
Good, that's progress.
But I will say this, I think when we send people back into the public workforce, or even when you're working remotely, it's worth considering how cognitive drift out by a cloud software company called Okta.
And they measured how many different apps the average company deployed last year,
and how many they deployed in 2015.
What do you mean by deployed?
Let's say I am a marketing executive or a finance executive or in accounting at some firm.
How many different apps or programs are on my computer that I'm expected to at least
occasionally engage with? Oh, you mean my company is actually asking me to have this app?
Correct. You have a company, you have an overlord, the University of Pennsylvania.
So you probably have different reporting software and communication software and so on.
So as of 2015, how many apps or programs would you say
the average company asked its employees to engage with at least sometimes?
My gosh, I hope it's not a super high number.
I was hoping it was like two or three.
In 2015, the number was 58.
Oh my gosh.
And last year, it's 89.
No, seriously? There's close to 100.
At large employers, that figure is 187.
Wait, how can that be?
Because when you work for a big company and you're trying to solve a problem,
it's often a really appealing solution
to find some software solution to your problem, as opposed to sorting it out and figuring out
how to actually address the root cause. So I'll read you a little bit here from this Bloomberg
News piece. Of those apps, the 187 at large firms, the 89 at the smaller firms. Close to 30% are duplicative or add no value,
according to a survey of senior business leaders by WalkMe, an enterprise software provider.
So let me point out the paradox here. This is a study done by one cloud software company,
which includes reporting by another enterprise software provider. I mean,
you see that the incentives to do this are huge
because it's a selling game.
You need another app.
Let me sell it to you.
And just think about the cognitive drift
or just the interruption of flow.
Every time you're asked to go to a different environment
or a different window to perform a different task,
your task at hand is getting interrupted.
And I think that's a huge issue in how people work today, because we're asking people to pay attention and then
giving them noises and visual cues and notifications that almost prevent them from
paying attention to a real task. So I have an example of what it should be,
because I think we have all had personal experience with what it shouldn't be.
Too many interruptions, not enough daylight.
The example that I want to give is this little town.
It's called Seaside and it's in Florida.
Many people saw the Truman Show, the Jim Carrey movie about this kind of utopian,
but it turns out to be like secretly dystopian town that's too perfect.
It's an actual town.
And the town is Seaside, Florida.
And when the movie directors were like scouting out places, they looked for literally the most beautiful place in the world.
And they found this little town that isn't even that old.
And it was built by two people, Robert and Daryl Davis, who I actually used to tutor their son in math
and then they're family friends now. Anyway, it's this little gem because each of the buildings
is actually built by an architect, very often a serious and famous architect. This place has a
little school called the Seaside Neighborhood School. The school is almost
exactly what Yield is talking about. It's not only a school for the children, but it's also
a community center. And it's actually built to mimic what Thomas Jefferson had created as the
University of Virginia plan. It's actually got these little pavilions, I guess, that are all
white wood. And then they are surrounding a central green,
just like Thomas Jefferson thought was like the ideal plan for the commerce of ideas, etc.
And anyway, it's just magical. And I have to say, there's something about being in that building
and walking along the colonnade, and it like connects all the classrooms outside because it's Florida,
you have this sense that if you have the right people creating the built environment,
that what they really are are psychologists. They figure out, oh, let's make a place for
community, but let's also make rooms where people can be by themselves. Let's make it beautiful.
They check all of the boxes of that study that say like, is there natural light? Is there fresh air? Is there enough complexity, but not too much complexity? It's like the platonic ideal of the built environment. continue to maintain that, or someone young like Yield is, to turn their attention to one
particular type of institution whose built environment is, in my personal experience,
almost always terrible. And it's a really important one. Can you guess what I'm thinking?
I'm thinking hospitals.
Hospitals.
Because they're terrible.
It's the worst. I think it's one of these, I don't know, some people would call it a coordination problem or a principal agent problem, which is the people
who are involved in doing the work of a hospital are so devoted to doing important work that this
seemingly less consequential component, which is how does it feel to be in there? What does it
look like? And I know that there has been some work. There was a paper way back in the 1980s I once saw called View Through
a Window May Influence Recovery from Surgery. There were some environmental psychologists led
by a guy named Robert Ulrich. I mean, it's a very small experiment. I wouldn't say it would stand up
to a lot of scrutiny, but he compared the outcome of 23 patients in rooms with windows that looked out at nice trees and 23 that faced
brick walls and found that they recovered faster when looking at nature. I know there's been
more recent research related to COVID, not in hospitals. There's a paper I'm looking at here
called The Importance for Wellbeing on Having Views of nature from and in the home during the COVID-19
pandemic. And all these studies find a similar effect, which is that, yeah, your environment
affects how you feel. None of this should surprise us. In a hospital, I think the double whammy is
that you're there because you're ill and hopefully recovering. One key component of recovering is sleeping well. And
it's so hard to sleep in a hospital because of all the-
Oh my gosh, it's ridiculous, the beeping.
So maybe Yildiz and the next generation can really turn their attention to that.
When Yildiz moves on from the master's thesis, which will be awesome, I'm sure, to hospitals,
I think this checklist that Professor Peter Barrett and
his colleagues put together for the seven factors that really matter, it's just the right checklist
for anything, I think. And here's what they say, not just categorically, but I think it's just very
helpful in its specificity. Daylight, fresh air, low noise, personalization, flexible, movable furniture, functional colors, open
layouts, lack of clutter.
That's not what a hospital sounds like to me.
But isn't that kind of what we all want for almost all of the things that we spend time
doing?
It is.
And that's not even including the major components of what I think about when I think about
architecture and design.
Things like flow and things like materials, all of which are important. And you know what else
is important? What? What's something that most people do a few times a day, but often is a
little bit inconvenient to get to? The bathroom? The bathroom. So check this out. There was a study
from the Journal of Urology, which is one of my favorite journals. I'm sure it's a page turner.
Which found that 88% of elementary school teachers
encourage their students to hold their pee.
Oh my gosh, I'm so not surprised.
Didn't that happen to you all the time
when you were in elementary school
and middle and high school, honestly?
And you're made to feel like a failure
for having to go to the bathroom.
In what world does that make sense?
So bathroom access is probably something.
Bathroom design.
Open doors.
You don't have to open the filthy door with your clean hands.
Wait, open doors?
You don't want to have doors on stalls in bathrooms?
Well, I was thinking about the actual front door.
So a lot of airports are getting this right now,
but a lot of other places, including hospitals, are still not.
So if you think about it, one thing you want to do in a bathroom
is design it so that when you leave, you don't have to put your hand on a doorknob or a push plate because you've just washed your hands.
And then you undo all that good work that you just did.
Right.
Oh, so in bathrooms in the airport, it's just cleverly like you turn left and you turn right so you can't see anything, but there's no door.
You got it.
You know, it's this kind of creativity.
Like, I cannot tell you how genius Robert and Daryl are.
And we're kind of like close enough
that I've been in their home for lunches, dinners.
I slept over.
Do they have doorless bathrooms there?
You know what?
They have everything that you want.
And you might think like, well, you know,
they have a lot of money, which is true
because Seaside's a very successful development.
But more than that, they have creativity.
And this is the thing.
Every single time I go back and visit them,
something has changed or moved.
Like, oh, what happened to that rack used to have?
Oh, well, we decided that like it made even more sense
to put things over here.
And I think this idea that if you have
not necessarily a lot of money,
but if you just have this mindset that like,
hey, the built environment works and I'm constantly going to just experiment to see, we should be
able to do things like doorless bathrooms. We should be able to do things like making sure
that kids have enough daylight. I mean, it doesn't necessarily take a high tech or even
high dollar sign solution to these things. If you just start with the question, which is,
how can we make the built environment work?
I think that is such a great point because, you know, mindset matters so much.
I would also say there's a behavioral component here, which is not so much about how am I
going to fit into this space and benefit from it, but how am I going to help other people
enjoy the space? In other words, how am I going to respect,
really, the other people in this space and be aware of the noise that I'm making or be aware of
how I may be impeding the flow of other people? Arlene Bronzaft, the environmental noise consultant
in New York City, she's lovely and a real New Yorker who speaks very directly and has
a lot of roses and a lot of thorns. In terms of the big thorn, what she'll say has really
contributed to our environments getting noisier and noisier. She says, it comes down to one word,
it's respect. People have lost respect for other people. And you know, I think we're living in a
funny time right now, especially re-emerging from this frozen, weird womb state of COVID, where a lot of people are now coming back
out into public and sort of forgetting how to behave in public. So maybe it's a good,
fresh start opportunity. We can be aware of how our environments affect us and be aware of how we
affect other people in that built environment.
Yeah, I like that. And can we build an environment that can do a little bit of the work of reminding us? Like, is it possible that somehow we can do what Churchill said, which is shape the
buildings intentionally so that they can shape us in the way that we want?
I love it. So, solution-wise, we probably need more people
like Yildiz who are actually thinking about the benefits of good design that go beyond the
individual people who are meant to benefit from that particular building. And I also think it's
really important to just acknowledge that we need more researchers to measure the gains and losses
from good and bad built environments. That's the way I would sum it up.
Amazing. Yes.
Coming up after the break, a fact check of today's conversation.
No Stupid Questions is produced by me, Rebecca Lee Douglas, and now here's a fact check of today's
conversation. In the first half of the show, Angela struggles to remember the context of
Winston Churchill's famous quote, first we shape our buildings and afterwards our buildings shape
us. And she guesses that it was after Parliament had been bombed during World War II.
This is correct.
In May of 1941, the Commons Chamber was struck by German Air Force bombs and entirely destroyed.
The Commons debated how to rebuild and decided to retain its, quote,
adversarial rectangle pattern, which Churchill insisted was responsible for the essence of British democracy. Parties are separated by what the House has referred to as two swords lengths apart, although it's been over 700
years since weapons were allowed in the chamber. Also, Angela notes that this design reflects the
United Kingdom's two-party system. Since World War II, all governments in the UK have been formed by either the Conservative
or the Labour Party, occasionally in coalition with smaller parties. But there are other parties
that hold seats in Parliament. Currently, the Scottish National Party, the Independents,
the Liberal Democrats, the Democratic Unionists, and six additional parties are all represented
in the chamber. The party in power sits on one
side of parliament, and all other parties sit in opposition. Next, Stephen describes a 1975 study
led by environmental psychologist and noise expert Arlene Bronzaft. He says she found something like
a full grade level of math achievement different in the noisy rooms versus the quiet rooms. However, the study did not address students' math abilities. Instead, Bronzaft and her colleagues
found that the students on the noisier east side of the building consistently demonstrated lower
levels of achievement on standardized reading tests. After the transit authority cushioned the
nearby subway rails with rubber pads and the classrooms were set up with sound-absorbing materials,
students' reading levels improved as much as a grade level.
Also, Stephen mispronounces the name of the IT service management company
featured in the Bloomberg article that he referenced.
He calls the company Okta, but it's actually pronounced Okta.
Then, Stephen references the 1984 article,
View Through a Window May Influence Recovery from Surgery, and says that the author's name is Robert
Ulrich. The environmental psychologist who led the study is actually Roger Ulrich. Ulrich is a
professor of architecture at the Center for Healthcare Building Research at Chalmers
University of Technology in Sweden. He is credited with popularizing the idea of evidence-based design
in healthcare. That's it for the fact check. Before we wrap today's show, let's hear listener
thoughts on some of our recent episodes of No Stupid Questions. Here's what listener John
Cosgrove had to say after hearing episode number 119.
Jesus, Angela, why are you such a f***ing potty mouth? Irish natives here in the Twin Cities. So we get to swear because people generally think it's cute and they think it's funny.
I've been on local radio and I've hosted corporate events
where I've introduced Irish swear words,
such as b***her, b***s, s*** and a**.
Those words are offensive in my country,
but they're not offensive over here
because people are not quite sure about it.
Here's what listener Lynn Chen had to say
in response to
episode number 124. How do you stop grinding your teeth? Hello, my name is Lin Chen. I live in Los
Angeles, California, and I just had to send a voice memo because I recently cracked two dental
guards in my sleep because I grind my teeth. And I finally went to go get Botox in my masseter muscles a few weeks ago,
and I'm still waiting to see if this actually helps. But in the meantime, I was just so excited
to find out that there are two more things that I have in common with Angela Duckworth.
We're both Asian Americans who have mothers named Teresa. We both love Diet Coke. And now,
we both grind our teeth and have Botox in our jaws.
Very exciting for me. And here's what listener Justine Benjamin said after listening to episode
number 121. How good are your snap judgments? Hi, I'm Justine from San Jose, California.
And the first impression that I had was about a person, a man, that I met when I started entering
the dating field. This gentleman was living at home, was working at his parents' business because
he was in between jobs, and drove a 1994 Mustang. All red flags for me, but I proceeded to date him
just thinking it would be fun. Turns out the reason why he was living at home was cultural.
You don't leave until you're married, and even when you get married, you might just stay with
the family still. Turns out the reason why he was working at his parents' business was because he
quit his job when his father had a stroke to take care of the business so it wouldn't fold.
I can't give any reasons or excuses for the 1994 Mustang. But nonetheless, we've been together for 14 years,
married for nine of those, have two amazing children.
So sorry, First Impressions, you were wrong.
Thanks so much to those listeners and to everyone who sent us their stories.
And remember, we'd still love to hear whether you're Team Dubner or Team Levitt.
Are you highly sensitive when it comes to your surroundings
or can you pretty much work anywhere?
Send a voice memo to nsq at Freakonomics.com.
Let us know your name.
And if you'd like to remain anonymous,
you might hear your voice on the show.
Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner again.
And that was a special episode of No Stupid Questions.
If you enjoyed listening to me chat with Angela Duckworth about psychology, architecture,
quitting your job, or if you'd like to hear us talk about swearing, teeth grinding, and
first impressions, you should go right now to your podcast app and follow or subscribe
to No Stupid Questions.
There are more than 100 episodes waiting for you there.
Meanwhile, coming up next time here on Freakonomics Radio.
Creativity is extremely difficult to predict.
We all know about the one-hit wonder phenomenon.
It's kind of got stigma associated with it,
but I actually think it should be seen as a positive thing.
We talk to some creativity scholars about their research and we find out what it feels like from the creator side. I hated that
paper. I found it really insulting. The day before you have a hit, it doesn't sound so bad. And the
day after you have a hit, you're like, God, I don't want this to be my whole life. The science
of the one hit wonder. That's next time on Freakonomics Radio.
Until then, take care of yourself.
And if you can, someone else too.
Freakonomics Radio and No Stupid Questions
are both part of the Freakonomics Radio Network,
which also includes people I mostly admire
and Freakonomics MD.
Our shows are produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
This episode was
produced by Rebecca Lee Douglas and mixed by Greg Rippin and Eleanor Osborne. Our staff also includes
Zach Lipinski, Morgan Levy, Ryan Kelly, Catherine Moncure, Alina Kallman, Julie Canfor, Jeremy
Johnston, Jasmine Klinger, Daria Klenert, Emma Terrell, Lyric Bowditch, and Elsa Hernandez.
Our executive team is Neil Carruth, Gabriel Roth, and me, Stephen Dubner. Our original music is Thanks for listening.
The conservatives on one side,
the Tories on the other.
No, no, no.
Conservative and Tory are the same.
OK, so the liberals on one side and the...
They don't call themselves liberals.
They call themselves labor.
Then there's the liberal Democrats,
which are a different party.
It gets confusing.
So confuzzling.
The Freakonomics Radio Network, the hidden side of everything. Stitcher.