Roos, Anders
- Department of Forest Products, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Factsheet2010Open access
Lindberg, Siv; Roos, Anders; Kihlstedt, Annika
Based on product semantics, this study investigated how visual attributes of wood are perceived and interpreted semantically. The wood species alder, ash, aspen, birch, beech, elm, lime, larch, maple, oak, pine and spruce were used. The subjects rated the samples based on the descriptive words natural, exclusive, environmental (i.e., ecofriendly), rough, inexpensive, dark, reliable, warm, modern, cosy, solid, and light. The most significant differences were between softwoods and hardwoods. Principal component analysis yielded three dimensions based on visual perceptions: exclusive/modern, environmental/natural and light vs. dark. Maple and ash, in addition to other hardwoods, were seen as more exclusive/modern than spruce and pine. Pine, on the other hand, was perceived as the most environmental/ natural wood type. Beech and alder did not score high on any of the three dimensions. The potential use of these results in product design and interior design is discussed.
Wood design; consumer study; perceptions; consumer studies
Research results (Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Forest Products)
2010, number: 8
Publisher: Institutionen för skogens produkter, Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet
Forest Science
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/29073