Adhering office spaces to various social-psychological profiles, well the first rule would probably be, one size is never going to fit all. Some fit group work/study areas while others are never going to adjust and remain productive.
So businesses come up with distance/remote workspaces, where a segment of someone's abode becomes a kind of designer cubicle, hopefully without a baby screaming behind a wall. (nowadays this space could conceivably be an RV out in the valleys of California, yikes!)
‘Tech professionals’ are not the only workers needing some kind of solitude space to create, the designers of many workplace items may need solitude to think/create.
Maybe it’s me but I think cubicle life, as isolationist as it is, has an edge over group workspaces, and yes a function dependent proviso must be considered, since for some people sharing is caring as long as it’s someone else doing the sharing.