Authors
Russ Parsons, Louis G Tassinary, Roger S Ulrich, Michelle R Hebl, Michele Grossman-Alexander
Publication date
1998/6/1
Journal
Journal of environmental psychology
Volume
18
Issue
2
Pages
113-140
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
A considerable body of folklore and scientific research alludes to the efficacy of the vernacular environment to influence both aesthetic experience and general well-being. To examine explicitly whether stress recovery and/or immunization varies as a function of the roadside environment, 160 college-age participants, both male and female, viewed one of four different video-taped simulated drives through outdoor environments immediately following and preceding mildly stressful events. Overall, it was anticipated that participants who viewed artifact-dominated drives, relative to participants who viewed nature-dominated drives, would show greater autonomic activity indicative of stress (e.g. elevated blood pressure and electrodermal activity), as well as show altered somatic activity indicative of greater negative affect (e.g. elevated electromyographic (EMG) activity over the brow region and decreased activity over the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Parsons, LG Tassinary, RS Ulrich, MR Hebl… - Journal of environmental psychology, 1998