Perceived Sensory Dimensions of Green Areas: An Experimental Study on Stress Recovery

Natural environments have been shown to promote health, and are, therefore, important for achieving social sustainability in cities. As cities grow and become denser, it is important to develop knowledge about the characteristics of natural environments that work to promote health. Perceived Sensory...

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Main Authors: Sanaz Memari, Mahdieh Pazhouhanfar, Patrik Grahn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/10/5419
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spelling doaj-f670483f1f5449948beaf0533c2654f42021-05-31T23:51:56ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-05-01135419541910.3390/su13105419Perceived Sensory Dimensions of Green Areas: An Experimental Study on Stress RecoverySanaz Memari0Mahdieh Pazhouhanfar1Patrik Grahn2Department of Architecture, Faculty of Engineering, Golestan University, Gorgan 4918888369, IranDepartment of Architecture, Faculty of Engineering, Golestan University, Gorgan 4918888369, IranDepartment of People and Society, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, 230 53 Alnarp, SwedenNatural environments have been shown to promote health, and are, therefore, important for achieving social sustainability in cities. As cities grow and become denser, it is important to develop knowledge about the characteristics of natural environments that work to promote health. Perceived Sensory Dimensions (PSDs) is a tool that defines eight different cultural ecosystem services. They correspond to different human needs (rest, exercise, socialising, pleasure, or security) resulting in rehabilitation and health and well-being promotion. An experiment was conducted to study the potential of PSDs to restore people who experienced stressful accidents. One hundred and fifty-seven participants were recruited and asked first to watch a film clip of serious accidents, then to look at the pictures, depicting one particular type of PSDs, while listening to its respective audio recording. Their stress levels were measured before exposure to the stressor (baseline), after exposure to the stressor (pre-test), and after exposure to a particular type of PSDs (post-test). The results show that all eight PSDs effectively provide mental recovery, but there are statistical differences in their potentials. As such, it is proposed that the combined potential of the PSDs is needed, and should be used to increase the capacity and supply of health-promoting urban green areas.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/10/5419evidence-based health designperceived sensory dimensionscultural ecosystem servicessocial sustainabilityrestorative statepublic health
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sanaz Memari
Mahdieh Pazhouhanfar
Patrik Grahn
spellingShingle Sanaz Memari
Mahdieh Pazhouhanfar
Patrik Grahn
Perceived Sensory Dimensions of Green Areas: An Experimental Study on Stress Recovery
Sustainability
evidence-based health design
perceived sensory dimensions
cultural ecosystem services
social sustainability
restorative state
public health
author_facet Sanaz Memari
Mahdieh Pazhouhanfar
Patrik Grahn
author_sort Sanaz Memari
title Perceived Sensory Dimensions of Green Areas: An Experimental Study on Stress Recovery
title_short Perceived Sensory Dimensions of Green Areas: An Experimental Study on Stress Recovery
title_full Perceived Sensory Dimensions of Green Areas: An Experimental Study on Stress Recovery
title_fullStr Perceived Sensory Dimensions of Green Areas: An Experimental Study on Stress Recovery
title_full_unstemmed Perceived Sensory Dimensions of Green Areas: An Experimental Study on Stress Recovery
title_sort perceived sensory dimensions of green areas: an experimental study on stress recovery
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Natural environments have been shown to promote health, and are, therefore, important for achieving social sustainability in cities. As cities grow and become denser, it is important to develop knowledge about the characteristics of natural environments that work to promote health. Perceived Sensory Dimensions (PSDs) is a tool that defines eight different cultural ecosystem services. They correspond to different human needs (rest, exercise, socialising, pleasure, or security) resulting in rehabilitation and health and well-being promotion. An experiment was conducted to study the potential of PSDs to restore people who experienced stressful accidents. One hundred and fifty-seven participants were recruited and asked first to watch a film clip of serious accidents, then to look at the pictures, depicting one particular type of PSDs, while listening to its respective audio recording. Their stress levels were measured before exposure to the stressor (baseline), after exposure to the stressor (pre-test), and after exposure to a particular type of PSDs (post-test). The results show that all eight PSDs effectively provide mental recovery, but there are statistical differences in their potentials. As such, it is proposed that the combined potential of the PSDs is needed, and should be used to increase the capacity and supply of health-promoting urban green areas.
topic evidence-based health design
perceived sensory dimensions
cultural ecosystem services
social sustainability
restorative state
public health
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/10/5419
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