In this episode of Terms of Service, host Mary Camacho speaks with Dr. Elizabeth C. Nelson, biomedical engineer and founder of Learn, Adapt, Build, about a deceptively simple idea: environments are not neutral. From open office layouts to wearable wellness metrics, the spaces and systems we design encode assumptions about who they are built for—and who must adapt to survive inside them.
Drawing from her own burnout experience and years of research bridging academia and practice, Elizabeth explains how modern workplaces often optimize for the most resilient minority rather than the majority. They explore how environmental design affects stress, cognition, sleep, and performance; why high performers are often the first to hit the wall; and how leadership teams can make practical, measurable changes that improve both well-being and output.
This conversation extends this season’s focus on health technology governance into the physical workplace itself — asking how environmental measurement, workplace design, and performance metrics can either support human thriving or quietly optimize for institutional control.
Dr. Elizabeth C. Nelson is a biomedical engineer, researcher, and founder of Learn, Adapt, Build. Her work bridges scientific research and real-world application, focusing on workplace design, burnout prevention, environmental measurement, and biological alignment. She advises leadership teams and organizations on how to create spaces that support focus, recovery, and sustainable performance.
If environments are not neutral, then design is a form of leadership. What assumptions are encoded in your workplace—or in the technologies you use every day? This episode invites you to rethink performance, burnout, and biology through the lens of space itself.
🎧 Listen now: https://termsofservice.xyz/
Host: Mary Camacho
Guest: Dr. Elizabeth C. Nelson
Produced by Terms of Service Podcast
Sound Design: Arthur Vincent and Sonor Lab
Co-Producers: Nicole Klau Ibarra & Mary Camacho