2018
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00009
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Shopping versus Nature? An Exploratory Study of Everyday Experiences

Abstract: Although a growing volume of empirical research shows that being in nature is important for human wellbeing, the definition of what constitutes an ‘experience in nature,’ and how this is different from other types of experiences, is very often left implied. In this paper we contrast everyday experiences involving nature with a category of everyday experience in which most people regularly partake. We present an exploratory study in which people (N = 357) were explicitly asked to describe a memory they had of a… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
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“…22 Schedlowski et al 27 emphasized that placebo effects have advanced as crucial tools to comprehend brain mechanisms that associate cognitive and psychological components with perceptions of symptom and organ functioning. In congruence, Locher et al 30 also draw great attention to the strong relationship between psychotherapy and placebo.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…22 Schedlowski et al 27 emphasized that placebo effects have advanced as crucial tools to comprehend brain mechanisms that associate cognitive and psychological components with perceptions of symptom and organ functioning. In congruence, Locher et al 30 also draw great attention to the strong relationship between psychotherapy and placebo.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, using placebo in practice is seen to endanger patients’ surgeon trust, from the point of view of medical students, while nursing students continue to consider it as a mean of deception. Locher et al 30 added that it is of most importance for the clinical practice that patients should have a secured right to be furnished with truthful information about how treatments work. Information about the nature of therapy – such as the importance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These may surface in water policy preferences as in the present case study, but also in very different contexts, where survey respondents can be clearly grouped e.g. into those deriving pleasure from shopping (as an economic activity) as opposed to nature experiences and vice versa (Craig et al 2018). Recognising that such opposing viewpoints are grounded in values suggests that policymakers may wish to adopt specific methods suited for the resolution or mediation of value conflict (e.g.…”
Section: Implications and Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Higher scores on these scales (for convenience, collectively referred to here as nature relatedness) have been linked with health and wellbeing [78,79]. Nature relatedness is also positively associated with empathy, pro-environmental attitudes and pro-social behaviors (higher humanitarianism and lower materialism) [80][81][82][83][84], and in at least one study, nature relatedness explains a high degree of variance in children's ecological behavior (vs. environmental knowledge alone) [85] (Figure 2). Research also shows that nature relatedness is associated with stronger connections to abstract social groups (that is, all of humanity, rather than a local social network) and distant others (such as a homeless person on the street) [86]; with this background, and separate research indicating that (at least to some degree) the health value of spending time in natural environments is predicated on baseline nature relatedness [87], it seems obvious that a greater understanding of how nature relatedness is "built" seems urgent [88,89].…”
Section: Building Nature Relatednessmentioning
confidence: 99%