2019
DOI: 10.3390/su11195386
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Perceptions of Cultural Ecosystem Services in Urban Parks Based on Social Network Data

Abstract: The value of a cultural ecosystem service depends on the perception of different cultural service categories. However, the data sources used in research on the perception of cultural service have limitations that mainly depend on social investigation, leading to slow progress in cultural service evaluation. With the advent of the era of network big data, social media provides a new data source for the study of cultural ecosystem service perception, so that the study of these services is expected to make new br… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…Urban parks are important elements of city infrastructure, providing numerous and diverse functions and benefits. A not exhaustive list includes positive impacts on health and wellbeing, through recreation, leisure, and sport activities [1]; community development, sense of place, identity, and social cohesion, through cultural activities and providing space and occasion for social interaction and mutual understanding [2]; education, as people can discover plants, animals and natural phenomena or use parks as outdoor classrooms [3]; the economy, as the presence of parks generates investment opportunities, attracts customers, including tourists [4], and increases the price of properties in the vicinity [5,6]; ecosystem functioning, through a range of ecosystem services, from biodiversity conservation to resource production [7], improving air quality (absorbing pollutants, regulating humidity) [8], carbon sequestration, water management (storm water absorption, and run off regulation), and mitigating urban heat islands [9].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Urban parks are important elements of city infrastructure, providing numerous and diverse functions and benefits. A not exhaustive list includes positive impacts on health and wellbeing, through recreation, leisure, and sport activities [1]; community development, sense of place, identity, and social cohesion, through cultural activities and providing space and occasion for social interaction and mutual understanding [2]; education, as people can discover plants, animals and natural phenomena or use parks as outdoor classrooms [3]; the economy, as the presence of parks generates investment opportunities, attracts customers, including tourists [4], and increases the price of properties in the vicinity [5,6]; ecosystem functioning, through a range of ecosystem services, from biodiversity conservation to resource production [7], improving air quality (absorbing pollutants, regulating humidity) [8], carbon sequestration, water management (storm water absorption, and run off regulation), and mitigating urban heat islands [9].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our study focuses on the use of urban parks and aims to analyze how friendly their planning, design, and use are for elderly people. The objectives of the study are (1) assessing the planning of urban parks in relation with elderly people needs and (2) comparing the behavior and perception of elderly people visiting urban parks with those of other groups of visitors.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ungulate game hunting, migratory game hunting and sedentary game hunting (i.e., hares, pheasants and partridges), typical of the entire national territory, are practised in these places. It was decided to focus the investigation on a purely agroforest area to fill a gap in sectoral research, namely the fact that "the literature on the valuation of cultural ecosystem services is disproportionately located in urban areas" [11] with particular reference to the themes of urban parks [2,10,52,53]. This may be due to the fact that CESs in urban areas are characterised by a form of more direct experience and a more immediate visibility than those experienced in recreational practices in agroforestry contexts [11].…”
Section: Study Area and Research Objectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…is disproportionately located in urban areas" [11] with particular reference to the themes of urban parks [2,10,52,53]. This may be due to the fact that CESs in urban areas are characterised by a form of more direct experience and a more immediate visibility than those experienced in recreational practices in agroforestry contexts [11].…”
Section: Study Area and Research Objectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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