“…Contrary to that, in the field of interior design in the South East Europe, most of the documents were articles (65.6%), conference papers were published in one quarter (25.2%), and reviews were published less than 10%. Subject area medicine was predominant (34.4%) followed by engineering (32.5%), social sciences (21.9%), environmental science (12.6%), arts and humanities (11.9%), and computer science (11.3%) [9]. These differences between architecture and interior design in the South East Europe could be as a result of different definitions of the both fields in the Scopus database, as a result of different percentage of applications of these disciplines in general, or as results of different regional activities of architecture and interior design.…”