Signage for Care
Signage for Care

The Science Behind Dementia-Friendly Design

9 min readSignage for Care15 January 2026

Dementia-friendly design is not guesswork. It is grounded in decades of cognitive science research exploring how dementia affects spatial navigation, memory retrieval, and visual processing. Understanding the science explains why high-contrast icons, consistent placement, and familiar imagery are so effective.

The principles of dementia-friendly design are sometimes dismissed as common sense or aesthetic preference. In reality, they are grounded in rigorous cognitive science research spanning several decades. Understanding how dementia affects the brain's ability to process visual information, navigate spatial environments, and retrieve memories reveals why specific design interventions, such as high-contrast pictorial signage, are so remarkably effective. This article explores the science behind the design principles that inform DSDC accreditation standards and best practice guidance.

How Dementia Affects Spatial Navigation#

Spatial navigation relies on a network of brain regions, with the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex playing central roles. These regions are among the first to be affected by Alzheimer's disease, the most common cause of dementia. Research by O'Keefe and Moser, which contributed to the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology, identified 'place cells' and 'grid cells' that form the brain's internal mapping system. As dementia damages these cells, the ability to form and retrieve mental maps of the environment deteriorates progressively. A resident who once navigated their care home with ease may gradually lose the ability to retrace a route from their bedroom to the dining room, even if they have walked it thousands of times.

The hippocampus, essential for spatial navigation and new memory formation, can lose up to 25% of its volume in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease. This explains why wayfinding difficulties are often among the first noticeable symptoms of cognitive decline.

Visual Processing and Contrast Sensitivity#

Dementia affects visual processing in ways that go far beyond simple visual acuity. Research from the UCL Dementia Research Centre has demonstrated that posterior cortical atrophy, a variant of Alzheimer's, specifically targets the brain's visual processing areas. Even in more typical presentations, contrast sensitivity, depth perception, and the ability to distinguish figure from ground are significantly impaired. This means that a sign with low contrast between text and background, which a person with healthy vision reads effortlessly, may be entirely invisible to a person with dementia. High-contrast design, using dark icons on light backgrounds or vice versa, ensures that the visual signal is strong enough to be detected by a compromised visual processing system.

Why Icons Outperform Text#

Language processing and reading ability are typically affected in the middle stages of dementia. The ability to read and comprehend written words declines as the language centres of the brain, particularly in the temporal and frontal lobes, are progressively damaged. However, pictorial recognition, processed partly by the fusiform gyrus and visual association areas, often remains intact much longer. A person who can no longer read the word 'Toilet' may still immediately recognise a pictorial icon of a toilet. This is why DSDC 1A accreditation standards specify the use of clear, realistic pictorial icons rather than relying on text alone. The icon communicates through a neural pathway that remains functional far longer in the disease process.

Key visual design principles supported by cognitive science research:

  • Minimum 60% luminance contrast between sign elements ensures detection by impaired visual processing systems
  • Realistic pictorial icons engage preserved visual recognition pathways rather than compromised language centres
  • Consistent sign placement reduces dependence on impaired spatial memory by creating habitual visual scanning patterns
  • Matt, non-reflective sign surfaces prevent glare that can cause visual distortion and confusion
  • Signs mounted at 1.2-1.4 metres align with the natural downward gaze associated with cautious gait patterns in dementia
  • Familiar, culturally appropriate imagery connects with long-term semantic memory, which is often better preserved than episodic memory
  • Avoidance of abstract symbols eliminates the need for learned interpretation, which requires intact executive function

Memory Systems and Environmental Cues#

Dementia does not destroy all memory systems equally. While episodic memory (memory for specific events) and working memory (short-term holding and manipulation of information) are typically affected early, procedural memory (how to perform routine tasks) and semantic memory (general knowledge about the world) are often preserved well into the moderate stages. Environmental design that leverages these preserved memory systems can significantly support daily functioning. A resident may not remember being shown where the dining room is (episodic memory), but they may respond to a familiar dining table icon on a sign (semantic memory) and follow a well-trodden route past consistent landmarks (procedural memory).

Pro Tip

When selecting signage, choose icons that depict objects in their most familiar, prototypical form. A toilet icon should look like a standard toilet that anyone would recognise, not a modern or stylised design. This taps into preserved semantic memory and maximises recognition across all stages of dementia.

The Role of Colour in Dementia-Friendly Design#

Colour perception changes in dementia are well documented in the research literature. Studies by Wijk and colleagues at Lund University found that people with dementia retain the ability to discriminate between colours in the blue-green and red-yellow spectrums better than between similar shades within the same colour family. This has direct implications for signage design: a blue sign on a cream wall is more easily detected than a light blue sign on a slightly darker blue wall. The DSDC recommends that critical signs use colours that are not only high-contrast in luminance but also distinct in hue from their surroundings. Additionally, warm colours (reds, oranges, yellows) tend to appear to advance towards the viewer, making them effective for highlighting important features.

Recommended Products

Our dementia-friendly signs are designed in accordance with the cognitive science summarised in this article. Each sign features high-contrast, realistic pictorial icons on carefully selected colour backgrounds, mounted in frames that provide additional contrast against the wall. They meet DSDC 1A accreditation standards, ensuring the design is evidence-based rather than merely aesthetic.

From Research to Practice#

The gap between research evidence and practical application in dementia care environments remains significant. Many care homes still rely on small, text-only signs with poor contrast, or invest in aesthetically pleasing but cognitively unhelpful design. Understanding the science empowers care providers to make evidence-based choices that genuinely support residents. Every design decision, from the height of a sign to the contrast of an icon, either works with or against the cognitive capabilities that a resident retains. Choosing to work with the science is choosing to respect and support the person living with dementia.

cognitive science
research
visual processing
spatial navigation
memory
high contrast
evidence-based design
DSDC