Nature with a Human Touch: Human-Induced Alteration Negatively Impacts Perceived Naturalness and Preferences for Natural Environments

Item

Title
Nature with a Human Touch: Human-Induced Alteration Negatively Impacts Perceived Naturalness and Preferences for Natural Environments
Identifier
fac_pubs/32
Date
3/1/2016
Abstract
Natural environments vary in the degree to which humans have altered them; some environments, like wilderness areas, are relatively untouched, while others, like urban green spaces, are heavily manicured. The current research examined the effect of human-induced alteration to natural environments on perceived naturalness and environmental preferences in a student sample (Study 1) and a sample of nonstudent adults (Study 2). It was predicted that a human-altered natural environment would be viewed as less natural than a non-altered natural environment. It was also predicted that a human-altered natural environment would be viewed more negatively than a non-altered natural environment. Results largely supported these predictions. Human-altered natural environments were viewed as less natural than non-altered natural environments, and across several indicators of environmental preference, participants responded more negatively to human-altered natural environments than non-altered natural environments. Perceived naturalness mediated the effect of human-induced alteration on each environmental preference variable, suggesting that non-altered environments are preferred because they are viewed as more natural than their human-altered counterparts. These findings are consistent with an evolutionary account of non-altered natural environments offering more benefits and entailing fewer costs than human-altered natural environments. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved) (journal abstract)
Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert
Language
eng
Type
Text
department or school name within institution
Psychological Sciences
Source
Ecopsychology
volume
8
issue
1
page start
54
page end
63
note
Final publication is available from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/eco.2015.0068
Creator
Ethan A McMahan
Jaime M Cloud
Patrick Josh
Michaell Scott