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Proceedings of: Workshop on Improving Building Design for Persons with Low Vision

Performance and Productivity

Comment by Tom Williams: It’s interesting to me that there doesn’t seem to be any more research out there on the connection of daylight to productivity. That’s almost amazing, that scientifically there isn’t any kind of support for that.

Response by Mariana Figueiro: Measuring productivity is really hard.

Comment by Jeanne Halloin: The Heschong-Mahone Group out of California has other daylighting research on productivity, both in schools, and then they also did one in Wal-Mart where in the daylit areas, no matter what was being sold there, they sold like 50 percent more in the stores. So I think there are two other studies that -- if we want to start talking about daylight -- that we could look at.

Response by Mariana Figueiro: Actually, that study was the one with the schools that the National Academy questioned. So there’s still some debate about the Heschong study. Some people agree with it; other people still have some questions about the data, how the variance explains the data and so on. In [the Heschong study] with performance in offices, they weren’t able to replicate with daylight. Measuring productivity is really hard, especially measuring productivity in the field.

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