| Literature DB >> 23587233 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Numerous studies have reported on the healing powers of plants and nature, but there have not been so many instances of experimental research. In particular, there are very few psychological and physiological studies using tactile stimuli. This study examines the psychological and physiological effects of touching plant foliage by using an evaluation profile of the subjects' impressions and investigating cerebral blood flow.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23587233 PMCID: PMC3660240 DOI: 10.1186/1880-6805-32-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol Anthropol ISSN: 1880-6791 Impact factor: 2.867
Figure 1Tactile samples. The samples are, clockwise from top left, metal, fabric, artificial pothos, natural pothos.
Figure 2Subjects.
Pairs of adjectives used in semantic differential method
| warm, cold | あたたかい-つめたい |
| smooth, rough | つるつる-ざらざら |
| soft, hard | やわらかい-かたい |
| natural, artificial | 自然な-人工的な |
| familiar, unfamiliar | 親しみやすい-親しみにくい |
| kind, unkind | やさしい-やさしくない |
| calming, stimulating | 沈静的な-覚醒的な |
| peaceful, anxious | 安心な-不安な |
| pleasant, unpleasant | 快適な-不快な |
| like, dislike | 好きな-嫌 いな |
Figure 3Experimental protocol.
Figure 4Result of the evaluation profile of the subjects’ impressions using the SD method. These plots show median SD score.
Summary of Steel-Dwass’s test results using the subjective SD method
| warm, cold | m < f** | | m < a** | f > n** | f > a** | – |
| smooth, rough | m > f** | m > n** | m > a** | f < n* | f < a** | – |
| soft, hard | m < f** | m < n** | m < a** | | f > a** | – |
| natural, artificial | m < f** | m < n** | m < a** | – | – | |
| familiar, unfamiliar | – | | – | – | – | – |
| kind, unkind | m < f** | – | | f > n** | f > a** | – |
| calming, stimulating | – | – | – | | | |
| peaceful, anxious | m < f** | | | f > n** | f > a** | |
| pleasant, unpleasant | m < f** | | | f > n** | f > a** | |
| like, dislike | m < f** | f > n** | f > a* |
*, P < 0.05 by Steel-Dwass’s test; **, P < 0.01 by Steel-Dwass’s test; -, any difference of median without statistical significance; >, the left side is larger than the right side in the descriptor; < the right side is larger than the left side in the descriptor. m, metal; f, fabric; n, natural pothos; a, artificial pothos.
Figure 5Time-series variations in cerebral blood flow. * P < 0.05 by Student’s t test compared with pre-stimulus (average for 30 s) ◇ P < 0.01 by Student’s t test compared with pre-stimulus (average for 30 s). CBF rose significantly immediately after touching the metal (a, b). Significant decreases in CBF were continuously seen between 10 s and 80 s with the fabric (c, d). For the natural pothos stimulus, there was a slight but significant reduction in CBF in the first half of the stimulus for the right frontal lobe and in the latter half of the stimulus (e, f) for the left frontal lobe. However, there was no significant difference in the stimulus of artificial pothos (g, h).