| Literature DB >> 31936083 |
Agnieszka Olszewska-Guizzo1,2, Angelia Sia3, Anna Fogel4, Roger Ho1,5.
Abstract
A growing body of evidence from observational and experimental studies shows the associations between exposure to urban green spaces (UGSs) and mental health outcomes. Little is known about which specific features of UGS that might be the most beneficial. In addition, there is potential in utilizing objective physiological markers of mental health, such as assessing brain activity, but the subject requires further investigation. This paper presents the preliminary findings from an on-going within-subject experiment where adult participants (n = 22; 13 females) were passively exposed to six landscape scenes within two UGSs (a park and a neighborhood green space) and three scenes of a busy urban downtown (control site). The landscape scenes were pre-selected based on their contemplative landscape score (CLS) to represent different levels of aggregation of contemplative features within each view. Participants went to each of the sites in a random order to passively view the scenes, while their electroencephalography (EEG) signal was being recorded concurrently. Frontal alpha asymmetry (FAA) values, commonly associated with the approach-related motivation and positive emotions, were extracted. The preliminary results show trends for the main effect of site on FAA, suggestive of stronger FAA in park compared to the control site, akin to more positive mood. There was also a trend for the interaction between the site and scene, which suggests that even within the individual sites, there is variability depending on the specific scene. Adjusting for environmental covariate strengthened these effects, these interim findings are promising in supporting the study hypothesis and suggest that exposure to urban green spaces may be linked to mental health outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: EEG; FAA; UGS; brain; contemplative; depression ; green; landscape; mental health; urban; visual; well-being
Year: 2020 PMID: 31936083 PMCID: PMC7014001 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17020394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Selected sites and scenes, with contemplative landscape score between 1 and 6 points for each scene.
Figure 2Setup and procedure: (a) participant viewing the scene in S2_3, (b) participant during resting state in S3_1, (c) participant walking between the scenes in Site 1 and (d) steps of the in-situ experimental protocol.
Sample characteristics (mean, SD or #).
| Variable | Participants in Preliminary Phase ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
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| Male | 9 (41%) | ||
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| Chinese | 16 (73%) | ||
| Indian | 1 (5%) | ||
| Others | 5 (22%) | ||
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| Tertiary | 20 (91%) | ||
| Secondary | 2 (9%) | ||
| High (92%–100%) | 0 | ||
| Versatile (70%–91%) | 3 (14%) | ||
| Unilateral (32%–69%) | 19 (86%) | ||
| Average (19%–31%) | 0 | ||
| Low (0%–19%) | 0 | ||
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| Low (1–16 pt.) | 19 (86%) | ||
| Moderate (17–30 pt.) | 3 (14%) | ||
| Significant (31–>40 pt.) | 0 | ||
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| M = 11 days (SD = 13 days) | ||
| Site 1 | Site 2 | Site 3 | |
| Temperature (°C) | M = 29.38 (SD = 0.63) | M = 27.73 (SD = 0.50) | M = 28.09 (SD = 0.62) |
| Humidity (%Rh) | M = 69.42 (SD = 0.62) | M = 72.13 (SD = 1.37) | M = 68.01 (SD = 0.30) |
| TDI | M = 26.76 (SD = 0.49) | M = 25.79 (SD = 0.41) | M = 26.52 (SD = 0.54) |
Notes: Interpretation of TDI values—<21—no discomfort; 21–24—less than half population feels discomfort; 25–27—more than half population feels discomfort; 28–29—most population feels discomfort and deterioration of psychophysical conditions; 30–32—the whole population feels a heavy discomfort; >32—sanitary emergency due to the very strong discomfort, which may cause heatstroke.
Figure 3Differences in mean values of frontal alpha asymmetry (FAA) across participants passively viewing the landscapes: (a) within 3 sites (Site 1—Urban Park, Site 2—Residential Green and Site 3—Control (Busy Downtown) and (b) exposed to nine different scenes of these sites (S1_1, S1_2, S1_3, S2_1, S2_2, S2_3, S3_1, S3_2 and S3_3; * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.1).