Abstract
In this chapter we consider how experiences of nature can affect human health and well-being. We first address the matter of ‘what has been’; that is, we sketch the development of theory and research concerned with health benefits of natural environments, from ancient times to the current situation. This shows the current research to be a recent expression of a number of long-running, intertwined, social and cultural processes. We then discuss ‘where we are now’; that is, we overview current theories and related research concerning processes through which nature experience might provide health benefits. These processes concern environmental preferences, psychological restoration, and learning and personal development. Finally, we consider ‘where we are going’; that is, we consider some additional directions for research and we identify some issues that research will have to address in the foreseeable future.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Abello RP, Bernaldez FG (1986) Landscape preference and personality. Landscape Urban Plan 13:19–28
Abramson L, Seligman M, Teasdale J (1978) Learned helplessness in humans: critique and reformulation. J Abnorm Psychol 87:49–74
Aks DJ, Sprott JC (1996) Quantifying aesthetic preference for chaotic patterns. J Empirical Stud Arts 4:1–16
Anderson D (2009) Humanizing the hospital: design lessons from a Finnish sanatorium. Canadian Medical Association Journal, September, doi:10.1503/cmaj.090075
Antonovsky A (1979) Health, stress, and coping. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA
Appleton J (1975) The experience of landscape. Wiley, London
Appleton J (1996) The experience of landscape, Revisedth edn. Wiley, London
Balling JD, Falk JH (1982) Development of visual preference for natural environments. Environ Behav 14:5–28
Barnsley M (1993) Fractals everywhere. Academic Press, London
Barnsley MF, Devaney RL, Mandelbrot BB, Peitgen HO, Saupe D, Voss RF (1988) The science of fractal images. Springer, New York
Bauer N, Wallner A, Hunziker M (2009) The change of European landscapes: human-nature relationships, public attitudes towards rewilding, and the implications for landscape management in Switzerland. J Environ Manage 90:2910–2920
Becker P (1994) Theoretische Grundlagen. In: Abele A, Becker P (ed) Wohlbefinden. Theorie – Empirie – Diagnostik. Juventa, Weinheim, pp 13–49. (Becker P (1994) Theoretical foundations. In: Abele A, Becker P (ed) Wellbeing. Theory – empirical data – Diagnostics. Juventa, Weinheim, pp 13–49)
Bell S (2001) Landscape pattern, perception and visualisation in the visual management of forests. Landscape Urban Plan 54:201–211
Berman MG, Jonides J, Kaplan S (2008) The cognitive benefits of interacting with nature. Psychol Sci 19:1207–1212
Bernstein A (1972) Wilderness as a therapeutic behavior setting. Therap Recreat J 6:160–161
Berto R (2005) Exposure to restorative environments helps restore attentional capacity. J Environ Psychol 25:249–259
Bodin M, Hartig T (2003) Does the outdoor environment matter for psychological restoration gained through running? Psychol Sport Exercise 4:141–153
Bonney SG (1901) Discussion upon climatic treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis versus home sanatoria. Trans Am Clin Climatol Assoc 17:224–234
Bossdorf O, Richards CL, Pigliucci M (2008) Epigenetics for ecologists. Ecol Lett 11:106–115
Bourassa SC (1988) Toward a theory of landscape aesthetics. Landscape Urban Plan 15:241–252
Bourassa SC (1990) A paradigm for landscape aesthetics. Environ Behav 22:787–812
Briggs P (1992) Fractals: the patterns of chaos. Thames and Hudson, London
Bringslimark T, Hartig T, Patil GG (2007) Psychological benefits of indoor plants in workplaces: putting experimental results into context. HortScience 42:581–587
Brower D (1990) For Earth’s sake: the life and times of David Brower. Gibbs Smith, Salt Lake City, UT
Brügger A, Kaiser FG, Roczen N (in press) One for all: connectedness to nature, inclusion of nature, environmental identity, and implicit association with nature. Euro Psychol. doi: 10.1027/1016-9040/a000032
Buck C, Llopis A, Nájera E, Terris M (1989) The challenge of epidemiology: issues and selected readings. Pan American Health Organization, Washington, DC
Carson R (1962) Silent spring. Houghton-Mifflin, Boston, MA
Catalano R (1979) Health, behavior, and the community: an ecological perspective. Pergamon, New York
Chang CY, Chen PK (2005) Human response to window views and indoor plants in the workplace. HortScience 40:1354–1359
Ciancio O, Nocentini S (2000) Forest management from positivism to the culture of complexity. In: Agnoletti M, Anderson S (eds) Methods and approaches in forest history (IUFRO Research Series 3). CABI Publishing, Oxon, UK
Cimprich B, Ronis DL (2003) An environmental intervention to restore attention in women with newly diagnosed breast cancer. Cancer Nurs 26:284–292
Clayton S (2003) Environmental identity: a conceptual and an operational definition. In: Clayton S, Opotow S (eds) Identity and the natural environment: the psychological significance of nature. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, pp 45–65
Coelho CM, Purkis H (2009) The origins of specific phobias: influential theories and current perspectives. Rev Gen Psychol 13(4):335–348
Cooper Marcus C, Barnes M (eds) (1999) Healing gardens: therapeutic benefits and design recommendations. Wiley, New York
Daniel TC (2001) Whither scenic beauty? Visual landscape quality assessment in the 21st century. Landscape Urban Plan 54:267–281
Deci E, Ryan R (2000) Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well being. Am Psychol 55(1):68–78
De Groot WT, Van den Born RJG (2003) Visions of nature and landscape type preferences: an exploration in The Netherlands. Landscape Urban Plan 63:127–138
De Hollander AEM, Staatsen BAM (2003) Health, environment and quality of life: an epidemiological perspective on urban development. Landscape Urban Plan 65:53–62
De Vries S, Verheij RA, Groenewegen PP, Spreeuwenberg P (2003) Natural environments-healthy environments? An exploratory analysis of the relationship between greenspace and health. Environ Plan A 35:1717–1731
Diamond J (1993) New Guineans and their natural world. In: Kellert SR, Wilson EO (eds) The biophilia hypothesis. Island Press, Washington, DC, pp 251–271
Diener E (2000) Subjective well-being: the science of happiness and a proposal for a national index. Am Psychol 55:34–43
Diener E, Lucas RE (2000) Subjective emotional well-being. In: Lewis M, Haviland-Jones JM (eds) Handbook of emotions, vol 2. Guilford, New York, pp 325–337
Dobzhansky T (1962) Mankind evolving. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT
Driver BL, Nash R, Haas G (1987) Wilderness benefits: a state-of-knowledge review. In: Lucas RC (ed) Proceedings – National wilderness research conference: issues, state-of-knowledge, future directions. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report INT-220, pp 294–319. United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Intermountain Research Station, Ogden, UT
Dubos R (1965) Man adapting. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT
Eder K, Ritter M (1996) The social construction of nature: a sociology of ecological enlightenment. Sage, London
Edginton B (1997) Moral architecture: the influence of the York retreat on asylum design. Health Place 3:91–99
Evernden N (1992) The social creation of nature. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD
Ewert A, McAvoy L (2000) The effects of wilderness settings on organized groups: a state-of-knowledge paper. In: McCool SF, Cole DN, Borrie WT, O’Loughlin J (eds) Wilderness science in a time of change conference – vol 3: wilderness a place for scientific inquiry. USDA forest service proceedings RMRS-P-15-VOL-3, 2000, pp 13–26. USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, Ogden, UT
Ewert A, Place G, Sibthorp J (2005) Early-life outdoor experiences and an individual’s environmental attitudes. Leisure Sci 2:225–239
Ekman K (2007) Herrarna i skogen. Albert Bonniers Förlag, Stockholm
Falk JH, Balling JD (2009) Evolutionary influence on human landscape preference. Environ Behav. doi:10.1177/0013916509341244
Field DJ (1989) What the statistics of natural images tell us about visual coding. SPIE proceedings on Human vision, visual processing and digital display, vol 1077, p 269
Fromm E (1964) The heart of man. Harper and Row, New York
Frumkin H (2001) Beyond toxicity: human health and the natural environment. Am J Prev Med 20:234–240
Fuchs T (2003) Bäder und Kuren in der Aufklärung: Medizinaldiskurs und Freizeitvergnügen. Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin
Gardiner CF (1901) The importance of an early and radical climatic change in the cure of pulmonary tuberculosis. Trans Am Clin Climatol Assoc 17:202–205
Garraty JA, Gay P (1972) Columbia history of the world. Harper & Row, New York
Geake J, Landini G (1997) Individual differences in the perception of fractal curves. Fractals 5:129–143
Gibson JJ (1979) The ecological approach to visual perception. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, MA
Gilden DL, Schmuckler MA, Clayton K (1993) The perception of natural contour. Psychol Rev 100:460–478
Gonzalez MT, Hartig T, Patil GG, Martinsen EW, Kirkevold M (2010) Therapeutic horticulture in clinical depression: a prospective study of active components. J Adv Nurs 66:2002–2013
Gouyet JF (1996) Physics and fractal structures. Springer, New York
Grundsten C (2009) Sveriges nationalparker. Bokförlaget Max Ström, Stockholm
Gurthrie WKC (1965) Presocratic tradition from Parmenides to Democritus (vol. 2 of his history of greek philosophy). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Hagerhall CM (2005) Fractal dimension as a tool for defining and measuring naturalness. In: Martens B, Keu AG (eds) Designing social innovation – planning, building, evaluating l. Hogrefe and Huber, Cambridge, MA, pp 75–82
Hagerhall CM, Purcell T, Taylor R (2004) Fractal dimension of landscape silhouette outlines as a predictor of landscape preference. J Environ Psychol 24:247–255
Hagerhall CM, Laike T, Taylor RP, Küller M, Küller R, Martin TP (2008) Investigations of human EEG response to viewing fractal patterns. Perception 37:1488–1494
Han KT (2007) Responses to six major terrestrial biomes in terms of scenic beauty, preference, and restorativeness. Environ Behav 39:529–556
Hartig T (1993) Nature experience in transactional perspective. Landscape Urban Plan 25:17–36
Hartig T (2004) Restorative environments. In: Spielberger C (ed) Encyclopedia of applied psychology, vol 3. Academic Press, San Diego, CA, pp 273–279
Hartig T (2007) Three steps to understanding restorative environments as health resources. In: Ward Thompson C, Travlou P (eds) Open space: people space. Taylor and Francis, London, pp 163–179
Hartig T, Cooper Marcus C (2006) Essay: healing gardens – places for nature in healthcare. Lancet 368:S36–S37
Hartig T, Evans GW, Jamner LD, Davis DS, Garling T (2003) Tracking restoration in natural and urban field settings. J Environ Psychol 23(2):109–123
Hartig T, Fransson U (2009) Leisure home ownership, access to nature, and health: a longitudinal study of urban residents in Sweden. Environ Plan A 41:82–96
Hartig T, Kaiser FG, Strumse E (2007) Psychological restoration in nature as a source of motivation for ecological behaviour. Environ Conserv 34:291–299
Hartig T, Korpela K, Evans GW, Gärling T (1997) A measure of restorative quality in environments. Scand Hous Plan Res 14:175–194
Hartig T, Mang M, Evans GW (1991) Restorative effects of natural environment experiences. Environ Behav 23:3–26
Hartig T, Staats H (2006) The need for psychological restoration as a determinant of environmental preferences. J Environ Psychol 26:215–226
Health Council of the Netherlands (2004) Nature and health. The influence of nature on social, psychological and physical well-being. Health Council of the Netherlands and Dutch Advisory Council for Research on Spatial Planning, Den Hague
Heerwagen JH, Orians GH (1993) Humans, habitats, and aesthetics. In: Kellert SR, Wilson EO (eds) The biophilia hypothesis. Island Press, Washington, DC, pp 138–172
Herzog TR (1985) A cognitive analysis of preference for waterscapes. J Environ Psychol 5:225–241
Herzog TR (1989) A cognitive analysis of preference for urban nature. J Environ Psychol 9:27–43
Herzog TR, Leverich OL (2003) Searching for legibility. Environ Behav 35:459–477
Herzog TR, Maguire CP, Nebel MB (2003) Assessing the restorative components of environments. J Environ Psychol 23:159–170
Hewitt R (2006) The influence of somatic and psychiatric medical theory on the design of nineteenth century American cities. History of Medicine Online. Accessed on the internet on 2010-04-14 at http://www.priory.com/homol/19c.htm
Howard E (1902/1946) Garden cities of to-morrow (reprinted). Faber and Faber, London (originally published in 1902)
Hunziker M (1995) The spontaneous reafforestation in abandoned agricultural lands: perception and aesthetic assessment by locals and tourists. Landscape Urban Plan 31:399–410
Irvine KN, Warber SL (2002) Greening healthcare: practicing as if the natural environment really mattered. Altern Ther Health M 8:76–83
Jablonka E, Lamb MJ (1998) Epigenetic inheritance in evolution. J Evol Biol 11:159–183
Jakobsson A (2004) Vatten, vandring, vila, vy och variation: den svenska kurparkens gestaltningsidé, exemplet Ronneby Brunnspark (Rapport nr 2004:1). Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet, Institutionen för landskapsplanering, Alnarp
Jensen FS, Koch NE (2004) Twenty-five years of forest recreation research in Denmark and its influence on forest policy. Scand J Forest Res 19(suppl 4):93–102
Joye Y (2007) Architectural lessons from environmental psychology: the case of biophilic architecture. Rev Gen Psychol 11:305–328
Kahn PH Jr (1997) Developmental psychology and the biophilia hypothesis: children’s affiliation with nature. Develop Rev 17:1–61
Kahneman D, Diener E, Schwarz N (1999) Well-being: the foundations of hedonic psychology. Russell Sage Foundation, New York
Kals E, Schumacher D, Montada L (1999) Emotional affinity toward nature as a motivational basis to protect nature. Environ Behav 31:178–202
Kaplan S (1987) Aesthetics, affect, and cognition: environmental preferences from an evolutionary perspective. Environ Behav 19:3–32
Kaplan S (1995) The restorative benefits of nature: toward an integrative framework. J Environ Psychol 15(3):169–182
Kaplan S, Kaplan R (1978) Humanscape: environments for people. Duxbury Press, Belmont, CA (republished Ann Arbor, MI: Ulrich’s Books, 1982)
Kaplan S, Kaplan R (1982) Cognition and environment: functioning in an uncertain world. Praeger, New York
Kaplan S, Talbot JF (1983) Psychological benefits of a wilderness experience. In: Altman I, Wohlwill JF (eds) Behavior and the natural environment. Plenum, New York, pp 163–203
Kaplan R, Kaplan S (1989) The experience of nature: a psychological perspective. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Kellert SR (1993a) The biological basis for human values of nature. In: Kellert SR, Wilson EO (eds) The biophilia hypothesis. Island Press, Washington, DC
Kellert SR (1993b) Attitudes toward wildlife among the industrial superpowers: the United States, Japan, and Germany. J Soc Issues 49:53–69
Kellert SR (1996) The value of life. Island Press, New York
Kellert SR (2002) Experiencing nature: affective, cognitive, and evaluative development in children. In: Kahn P, Kellert SR (eds) Children and nature: psychological, sociocultural, and evolutionary investigations. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, pp 117–151
Knill DC, Field D, Kersten D (1990) Human discrimination of fractal images. J Opt Soc Am 77:1113–1123
Knopf R (1987) Human behavior, cognition, and affect in the natural environment. In: Stokols D, Altman I (eds) Handbook of Environmental Psychology, vol 1. Wiley, New York, pp 783–825
Konijnendijk CC (2003) A decade of urban forestry in Europe. Forest Pol Econ 5:173–186
Korpela K, Hartig T (1996) Restorative qualities of favorite places. J Environ Psychol 16:221–233
Korpela KM (1989) Place identity as a product of environmental self-regulation. J Environ Psychol 9:241–256
Korpela KM, Hartig T, Kaiser FG, Fuhrer U (2001) Restorative experience and self-regulation in favorite places. Environ Behav 33:572–589
Korpela KM, Ylén M (2009) Effectiveness of favorite-place prescriptions: a field experiment. Am J Prev Med 36:435–438
Kuo FE, Sullivan WC (2001) Aggression and violence in the inner city: effects of environment via mental fatigue. Environ Behav 33:543–571
Laumann K, Gärling T, Stormark KM (2001) Rating scale measures of restorative components of environments. J Environ Psychol 21:31–44
Laumann K, Gärling T, Stormark KM (2003) Selective attention and heart rate responses to natural and urban environments. J Environ Psychol 23:125–134
Leopold A (1949) A sand county almanac with sketches here and there. Oxford University Press, Oxford
Leventhal H, Nerenz DR, Steele DJ (1984) Illness representations and coping with health threats. In: Baum A, Taylor SE, Singer JE (eds) Handbook of psychology and health: vol 4. Erlbaum, Hillsdale, NJ, pp 219–252
Levitt L (1988) Therapeutic value of wilderness. In: Freilich HR (ed) Wilderness Benchmark 1988: proceedings of the National wilderness colloquium. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report SE-51, pp 156–168. United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, Asheville, NC
Lichtenstein P, Annas P (2000) Heritability and prevalence of specific fears and phobias in childhood. J Child Psychol Psychiatr All Disciplines 41:927–937
Lindhagen A, Hörnsten L (2000) Forest recreation in 1977 and 1997 in Sweden: changes in public preferences and behavior. Forestry 73:143–151
Lohr VI, Pearson-Mims CH (2006) Responses to scenes with spreading, rounded, and conical tree forms. Environ Behav 38:667–688
Maas J, Verheij RA, Groenewegen PP, de Vries S, Spreeuwenberg P (2006) Green space, urbanity and health: how strong is the relation? J Epidemiol Commun Health 60:587–592
Mandelbrot BB (1983) The fractal geometry of nature. W. H. Freeman, New York
Mansén E (1998) An image of Paradise: Swedish spas in the 18th Century. Eighteenth Cen Stud 31:511–516
Mausner C (1996) A kaleidoscope model: defining natural environments. J Environ Psychol 16:335–348
Mayer FS, Frantz CMP (2004) The connectedness to nature scale: a measure of individuals’ feeling in community with nature. J Environ Psychol 24:503–515
Meacham S (1999) Regaining paradise: Englishness and the early Garden City movement. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT
Mitchell R, Popham F (2007) Greenspace, urbanity and health: relationships in England. J Epidemiol Commun Health 61:681–683
Mitchell R, Popham F (2008) Effect of exposure to natural environment on health inequalities: an observational population study. Lancet 372:1655–1660
Muir J (1901/1981) Our National Parks. Houghton Mifflin, New York. Republished by University of Wisconsin Press, Madison
Naddaf G (2006) The Greek concept of nature. Suny Press, New York
Nash R (1982) Wilderness and the American mind, 3rd edn. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT
Newman RS (1980) Alleviating learned helplessness in a wilderness setting: an application of attribution theory to Outward Bound. In: Fyans LJ Jr (ed) Achievement motivation: recent trends in theory and research. Plenum, New York, pp 312–345
Nordh H, Hartig T, Hagerhall C, Fry G (2009) Components of small urban parks that predict the possibility for restoration. Urban Forest Urban Green 8:225–235
Öhman A, Mineka S (2001) Fears, phobias, and preparedness: toward an evolved module of fear learning. Psychol Rev 108:483–522
Olmsted FL (1865/1952) The Yosemite valley and the Mariposa big trees: a preliminary report. with an introductory note by Laura Wood Raper. Landscape Archit 43:12–25
Orians GH (1980) Habitat selection: general theory and applications to human behavior. In: Lockard JS (ed) The evolution of human social behavior. Elsevier, New York, pp 49–66
Orians GH (1986) An ecological and evolutionary approach to landscape aesthetics. In: Penning-Rowsell EC, Lowenthal D (eds) Landscape meanings and values. Allen and Unwin, London, pp 4–25
Orians GH, Heerwagen JH (1992) Evolved responses to landscapes. In: Barkow JH, Cosmides L, Tooby J (eds) The adapted mind: evolutionary psychology and the generation of culture. Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp 555–579
Ottosson J, Grahn P (2005) A comparison of leisure time spent in a garden with leisure time spent indoors: on measures of restoration in residents in geriatric care. Landscape Res 30(1):23–55
Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission (1962) Wilderness and recreation – a report on resources, values, and problems (ORRRC Study Report 3). US Government Printing Office, Washington, DC
Pals R, Steg L, Siero FW, van der Zee KI (2009) Development of the PRCQ: a measure of perceived restorative characteristics of zoo attractions. J Environ Psychol 29:441–449
Park BJ, Tsunetsugu Y, Kasetani T, Hirano H, Kagawa T, Sato M, Miyazaki Y (2007) Physiological effects of shinrin-yoku (taking in the atmosphere of the forest) – using salivary cortisol and cerebral activity as indicators. J Physiol Anthropol 26:123–128
Parsons R (1991) The potential influences of environmental perception on human health. J Environ Psychol 11:1–23
Parsons R, Tassinary LG, Ulrich RS, Hebl MR, Grossman-Alexander M (1998) The view from the road: implications for stress recovery and immunization. J Environ Psychol 18:113–140
Pickover C (1995) Keys to infinity. Wiley, New York
Pinchot G (1987) Breaking new ground. Island Press, Washington, DC (originally published by Harcourt, Brace, and Co, New York, 1947)
Pitt DG, Zube EH (1987) Management of natural environments. In: Stokols D, Altman I (eds) Handbook of environmental psychology, 2. Wiley, New York, pp 1009–1042
Potts R (1998) Environmental hypotheses of hominin evolution. Yearbook Phys Anthropol 41:93–136
Pretty JN, Peacock J, Sellens M, Griffin M (2005) The mental and physical health outcomes of green exercise. Int J Environ Health Res 15:319–337
Purcell AT, Lamb RJ (1984) Landscape perception: an examination and empirical investigation of two central issues in the area. J Environ Manage 19: 31–63
Reser JP, Scherl LM (1988) Clear and unambiguous feedback: a transactional and motivational analysis of environmental challenge and self-encounter. J Environ Psychol 8:269–286
Roggenbuck JW, Lucas RC (1987) Wilderness use and user characteristics: a state-of-knowledge review. In: Lucas RC (ed) Proceedings – National wilderness research conference: issues, state-of-knowledge, future directions. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report INT-220. United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Intermountain Research Station, Ogden, UT, pp 204–245
Rogowitz BE, Voss RF (1990) Shape perception and low dimension fractal boundary contours. In: Rogowitz BE, Allenbach J (eds) Proceedings of the conference on human vision: methods, models and applications, Santa Clara. SPIE/SPSE symposium on Electron imaging, vol 1249, pp 387–394
Rosen G (1993) A history of public health, expandedth edn. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD
Runte A (1979) National parks: the American experience. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, NB
Russell KC (2000) Exploring how the wilderness therapy process relates to outcomes. J Experiential Education 23:170–176
Ryan RM, Weinstein N, Bernstein J, Brown KW, Mistretta L, Gagné M (2010) Vitalizing effects of being outdoors and in nature. J Environ Psychol 30:159–168
Schama S (1995) Landscape and memory. Vintage Books, New York
Schultz PW (2002) Inclusion with nature: the psychology of human-nature relations. In: Schmuck P, Schultz PW (eds) The psychology of sustainable development. Kluwer, New York, pp 61–78
Scopelliti M, Giuliani MV (2004) Choosing restorative environments across the lifespan: a matter of place experience. J Environ Psychol 24:423–437
Scott A (2003) Assessing public perception of landscape: from practice to policy. J Environ Pol Plan 5:123–144
Seligman MEP (1970) On the generality of the laws of learning. Psychol Rev 77:406–418
Seligman MEP (1975) Helplessness: on depression, development, and death. Freeman, San Francisco
Sempik J, Aldrige J, Becker S (2003) Social and therapeutic horticulture: evidence and messages from research: thrive and centre for child and family research. Loughborough University, UK
Shin WS (2007) The influence of forest view through a window on job satisfaction and job stress. Scand J Forest Res 22:248–253
Simonič T (2003) Preference and perceived naturalness in visual perception of naturalistic landscapes. Zb Bioteh Fak Univ Ljublj Kmet 81:369–387
Spehar B, Clifford CWG, Newell BR, Taylor RP (2003) Universal aesthetic of fractals. Comput Graph 27:813–820
Staats H, Hartig T (2004) Alone or with a friend: a social context for psychological restoration and environmental preferences. J Environ Psychol 24:199–211
Staats H, Kieviet A, Hartig T (2003) Where to recover from attentional fatigue: an expectancy-value analysis of environmental preference. J Environ Psychol 23:147–157
Stamps AE (2004) Mystery, complexity, legibility and coherence: a meta-analysis. J Environ Psychol 24:1–16
Stamps AE (2006) Literature review of prospect and refuge theory: the first 214 references. Institute of Environmental Quality, San Francisco, CA. Accessed on the internet on 2010-04-14 at http://home.comcast.net/~instituteofenvironmentalquality/LitReviewProspectAndRefuge.pdf
Stamps AE (2008a) Some findings on prospect and refuge theory: I. Percept Motor Skill 106:147–162
Stamps AE (2008b) Some findings on prospect and refuge theory: II. Percept Motor Skill 107:141–158
Stankey GH, Schreyer R (1987) Attitudes toward wilderness and factors affecting visitor behavior: a state-of-knowledge review. In: Lucas RC (ed) Proceedings – National wilderness research conference: issues, state-of-knowledge, future directions. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report INT-220. United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Intermountain Research Station, Ogden, UT, pp 246–293
Stremlow M, Sidler C (2002) Schreibzüge durch die Wildnis. In: Wildnisvorstellungen in Literatur und Printmedien der Schweiz. Haup, Bern
Stockdale SE, Wells KB, Tang L, Belin TR, Zhang L, Sherbourne CD (2007) The importance of social context: neighborhood stressors, stress-buffering mechanisms, and alcohol, drug, and mental health disorders. Soc Sci Med 65:1867–1881
Strumse E (1996) Demographic differences in the visual preferences for agrarian landscapes in western Norway. J Environ Psychol 16:17–31
Summit J, Sommer R (1999) Further studies of preferred tree shapes. Environ Behav 31:550–576
Susser M, Susser E (1996) Choosing a future for epidemiology: I Eras and paradigms. Am J Pub Health 86:668–673
Szczygiel B, Hewitt R (2000) Nineteenth-century medical landscapes: John H. Rauch, Frederick Law Olmsted, and the search for salubrity. Bull Hist Med 74:708–734
Taylor RP (1998) Splashdown. New Sci 2144:30
Taylor RP (2001) Architects reaches for the clouds: how fractals may figure in our appreciation of a proposed new building. Nature 410:18
Taylor RP (2003) Fractal expressionism-where art meets science. In: Kasti J, Karlqvist A (eds) Art and complexity. Elsevier, Amsterdam
Taylor RP (2006) Reduction of physiological stress using fractal art and architecture. Leonardo 39(3):45–251
Taylor RP, Newell B, Spehar B, Clifford CWG (2001) Fractals: a resonance between art and nature? Symmetry: art and science 1:194–18197
Taylor RP, Spehar B, Wise JA, Clifford CWG, Newell BR, Hagerhall CM, Purcell T, Martin TP (2005) Perceptual and physiological responses to the visual complexity of fractal patterns. J Nonlinear Dynam Psychol Life Sci 9:89–114
Thomas K (1983) Man and the natural world: a history of the modern sensibility. Pantheon Books, New York
Townsend M (2006) Feel blue? Touch green! Participation in forest/woodland management as a treatment for depression. Urban Forest Urban Green 5:111–120
Tuan YF (1974) Topophilia: a study of environmental perception, attitudes, and values. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ
Ulrich RS (1983) Aesthetic and affective response to natural environment. Behavior and the natural environment. In: Altman I, Wohlwill JF (eds) Behavior and the natural environment. Plenum, New York, pp 85–125
Ulrich RS (1984) View through a window may influence recovery from surgery. Science 224:420–421
Ulrich RS (1993) Biophilia, biophobia, and natural landscapes. In: Kellert SR, Wilson EO (eds) The biophilia hypothesis. Island Press, Washington, DC, pp 73–137
Ulrich RS (1999) Effects of gardens on health outcomes: theory and research. In: Cooper Marcus C, Barnes M (eds) Healing gardens: therapeutic benefits and design recommendations. Wiley, New York, pp 27–86
Ulrich RS, Simons R, Losito BD, Fiorito E, Miles MA, Zelson M (1991) Stress recovery during exposure to natural and urban environments. J Environ Psychol 11:201–230
Van den Berg AE, Koole SL, Van der Wulp NY (2003) Environmental preference and restoration: (How) are they related? J Environ Psychol 23:135–146
Van Den Berg AE, Maas J, Verheij RA, Groenewegen PP (2010) Green space as a buffer between stressful life events and health. Soc Sci Med 70:1203–1210
Van den Berg AE, ter Heijne M (2005) Fear versus fascination: an exploration of emotional responses to natural threats. J Environ Psychol 25(3):261–272
Van Den Berg AE, Van Winsum-Westra M (2010) Manicured, romantic, or wild? The relation between need for structure and preferences for garden styles. Urban Forestry and Urban Greening 9:179–186
Van den Berg AE, Vlek CAJ, Coeterier JF (1998) Group differences in the aesthetic evaluation of nature development plans: a multilevel approach. J Environ Psychol 18:141–157
Van Herzele A, Wiedemann T (2003) A monitoring tool for the provision of accessible and attractive urban green spaces. Landscape Urban Plan 63:109–126
Velarde MD, Fry G, Tveit M (2007) Health effects of viewing landscapes – landscape types in environmental psychology. Urban Forest Urban Green 6:199–212
von Engelhardt D (1997) Tuberkulose und Kultur um 1900: Arzt, Patient und Sanatorium in Thomas Manns ‘Zauberberg’ aus medizinhistorischer Sicht. In: Sprecher T (ed) Auf dem Weg zum ‘Zauberberg’: die Davoser Literaturtage 1996, (s. 323–346). Klostermann, Frankfurt am Main
Wells NM, Evans GW (2003) Nearby nature: a buffer of life stress among rural children. Environ Behav 35:311–330
Whiston Spirn A (1985) Urban nature and human design: renewing the great tradition. J Plan Edu Res 5:39–51
Wilson EO (1984) Biophilia, the human bond with other species. Harvard University Press, Cambridge
Wodziczko A (1928) Wielkopolski Park Narodowy w Ludwikowie pod Poznaniem (Wielkopolski National Park in Ludwikowo near Poznan). Ochrona Przyrody 8:46–67
Wodziczko A (1930) Ziele〉 miast z punktu widzenia ochrony roślin (Urban green space as seen from the nature conservation point of view). Ochrona Przyrody 10:34–45
Wohlwill JF (1983) The concept of nature: a psychologist’s view. In: Altman I, Wohlwill JF (eds) Behavior and the natural environment. Plenum Press, New York, pp 5–37
World Health Organization (1948) Preamble to the Constitution of the World Health Organization as adopted by the International Health Conference, New York, 19–22 June 1946; signed on 22 July 1946 by the representatives of 61 states (Official records of the World Health Organization, no. 2, p 100) and entered into force on 7 April 1948. WHO, Geneva
World Health Organization (1986) Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion. WHO, Geneva
Zube EH, Sell JL, Taylor JG (1982) Landscape perception: research, application, and theory. Landscape Plan 9:1–33
Zuckerman M (1994) Behavioral expressions and biosocial bases of sensation seeking. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2011 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Hartig, T. et al. (2011). Health Benefits of Nature Experience: Psychological, Social and Cultural Processes. In: Nilsson, K., et al. Forests, Trees and Human Health. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9806-1_5
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-9806-1_5
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-90-481-9805-4
Online ISBN: 978-90-481-9806-1
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)