Greenery in the university environment: Students' preferences and perceived restoration likelihood.

A large body of evidence shows that interaction with greenery can be beneficial for human stress reduction, emotional states, and improved cognitive function. It can, therefore, be expected that university students might benefit from greenery in the university environment. Before investing in real-l...

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Main Authors: Nicole van den Bogerd, S Coosje Dijkstra, Jacob C Seidell, Jolanda Maas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5813944?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-6c30fa85310349ccbbe1682e03094d702020-11-25T02:12:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01132e019242910.1371/journal.pone.0192429Greenery in the university environment: Students' preferences and perceived restoration likelihood.Nicole van den BogerdS Coosje DijkstraJacob C SeidellJolanda MaasA large body of evidence shows that interaction with greenery can be beneficial for human stress reduction, emotional states, and improved cognitive function. It can, therefore, be expected that university students might benefit from greenery in the university environment. Before investing in real-life interventions in a university environment, it is necessary to first explore students' perceptions of greenery in the university environment. This study examined (1) preference for university indoor and outdoor spaces with and without greenery (2) perceived restoration likelihood of university outdoor spaces with and without greenery and (3) if preference and perceived restoration likelihood ratings were modified by demographic characteristics or connectedness to nature in Dutch university students (N = 722). Digital photographic stimuli represented four university spaces (lecture hall, classroom, study area, university outdoor space). For each of the three indoor spaces there were four or five stimuli conditions: (1) the standard design (2) the standard design with a colorful poster (3) the standard design with a nature poster (4) the standard design with a green wall (5) the standard design with a green wall plus interior plants. The university outdoor space included: (1) the standard design (2) the standard design with seating (3) the standard design with colorful artifacts (4) the standard design with green elements (5) the standard design with extensive greenery. Multi-level analyses showed that students gave higher preference ratings to the indoor spaces with a nature poster, a green wall, or a green wall plus interior plants than to the standard designs and the designs with the colorful posters. Students also rated preference and perceived restoration likelihood of the outdoor spaces that included greenery higher than those without. Preference and perceived restoration likelihood were not modified by demographic characteristics, but students with strong connectedness to nature rated preference and perceived restoration likelihood overall higher than students with weak connectedness to nature. The findings suggest that students would appreciate the integration of greenery in the university environment.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5813944?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicole van den Bogerd
S Coosje Dijkstra
Jacob C Seidell
Jolanda Maas
spellingShingle Nicole van den Bogerd
S Coosje Dijkstra
Jacob C Seidell
Jolanda Maas
Greenery in the university environment: Students' preferences and perceived restoration likelihood.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nicole van den Bogerd
S Coosje Dijkstra
Jacob C Seidell
Jolanda Maas
author_sort Nicole van den Bogerd
title Greenery in the university environment: Students' preferences and perceived restoration likelihood.
title_short Greenery in the university environment: Students' preferences and perceived restoration likelihood.
title_full Greenery in the university environment: Students' preferences and perceived restoration likelihood.
title_fullStr Greenery in the university environment: Students' preferences and perceived restoration likelihood.
title_full_unstemmed Greenery in the university environment: Students' preferences and perceived restoration likelihood.
title_sort greenery in the university environment: students' preferences and perceived restoration likelihood.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description A large body of evidence shows that interaction with greenery can be beneficial for human stress reduction, emotional states, and improved cognitive function. It can, therefore, be expected that university students might benefit from greenery in the university environment. Before investing in real-life interventions in a university environment, it is necessary to first explore students' perceptions of greenery in the university environment. This study examined (1) preference for university indoor and outdoor spaces with and without greenery (2) perceived restoration likelihood of university outdoor spaces with and without greenery and (3) if preference and perceived restoration likelihood ratings were modified by demographic characteristics or connectedness to nature in Dutch university students (N = 722). Digital photographic stimuli represented four university spaces (lecture hall, classroom, study area, university outdoor space). For each of the three indoor spaces there were four or five stimuli conditions: (1) the standard design (2) the standard design with a colorful poster (3) the standard design with a nature poster (4) the standard design with a green wall (5) the standard design with a green wall plus interior plants. The university outdoor space included: (1) the standard design (2) the standard design with seating (3) the standard design with colorful artifacts (4) the standard design with green elements (5) the standard design with extensive greenery. Multi-level analyses showed that students gave higher preference ratings to the indoor spaces with a nature poster, a green wall, or a green wall plus interior plants than to the standard designs and the designs with the colorful posters. Students also rated preference and perceived restoration likelihood of the outdoor spaces that included greenery higher than those without. Preference and perceived restoration likelihood were not modified by demographic characteristics, but students with strong connectedness to nature rated preference and perceived restoration likelihood overall higher than students with weak connectedness to nature. The findings suggest that students would appreciate the integration of greenery in the university environment.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5813944?pdf=render
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