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Ever wonder why a room that photographs beautifully feels stressful to sit in? We dig into the science with Dr. Anja Jamrozik, an environmental psychologist turned product leader, to reveal how light, noise, temperature, faces in view, and even app layouts quietly steer your focus, memory, and stress. The big shift: your brain treats physical and digital spaces as environments, and environments train behavior. We trace Dr. Anja’s path from cognitive neuroscience to running living lab experiments that tweaked lighting, temperature, and noise—then uncovered a wild effect: when those were off, people swore air quality was worse, even when sensors proved it hadn’t changed. That holistic judgment explains common design fails, from echoey glass partitions and “watched” feelings in open plans to dark contrast corners no one uses. The fix is empathy and intention: design for the activity, not the rendering. Shield sightlines for deep work, tame acoustics, and make beauty serve function. Then we take those lessons into software. Switching tabs is a digital doorway that wipes working memory. We break down how to keep critical info in context, structure comparisons side by side, and weave in biophilic cues—subtle motion, natural textures, and seasonal color shifts—to restore attention. Control matters too: let people shape their digital “rooms” the way they move furniture at home. We also explore the pull of handmade work. Evidence shows people value handmade objects more and feel more competent when they make things—if the outcome lasts. In an AI-saturated world, the human signature, with all its variation and patina, may matter more than ever. Along the way, Dr. Anja offers one high-impact move you can try this week: work by a window with a view to boost working memory and inhibition. Add a plant, soften sound, and run a five-minute meta-check: what rose to awareness is your data. If this sparked ideas, help others find it—follow the show, subscribe, and leave a quick review. Share it with someone who craves a calmer home office or a more humane app. Your space can teach your brain to focus; let’s design it to help.