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Environmental psychology



 
 
Environmental psychology is an interdisciplinary field focused on the interplay between humans and their surroundings. The field defines the term environment very broadly including all that is natural on the planet as well as social settings, built environments, learning environments and informational environments. When solving problems involving human-environment interactions, whether global or local, one must have a model of human nature that predicts the environmental conditions under which humans will behave in a decent and creative manner.






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Environmental psychology is an interdisciplinary field focused on the interplay between humans and their surroundings. The field defines the term environment very broadly including all that is natural on the planet as well as social settings, built environments, learning environments and informational environments. When solving problems involving human-environment interactions, whether global or local, one must have a model of human nature that predicts the environmental conditions under which humans will behave in a decent and creative manner. With such a model one can design, manage, protect and/or restore environments that enhance reasonable behavior, predict what the likely outcome will be when these conditions are not met, and diagnose problem situations. The field develops such a model of human nature while retaining a broad and inherently multidisciplinary focus. It explores such dissimilar issues as common property resource management, wayfinding in complex settings, the effect of environmental stress on human performance, the characteristics of restorative environments, human information processing, and the promotion of durable conservation behavior. The field of environmental psychology recognizes the need to be problem-oriented, using, as needed, the theories and methods of related disciplines (e.g., psychology, sociology, anthropology, biology, ecology).

Scope


Although "environmental psychology" is arguably the best-known and more comprehensive description of the field, it is also known as human factors
Human factors

Human factors is a term that covers:* The science of understanding the properties of human capability .* The application of this understanding to the design and development of systems and services ....
 science, cognitive ergonomics
Cognitive ergonomics

Cognitive ergonomics studies cognition in work settings, in order to optimize human well-being and system performance. It is a subset of the larger field of human factors and ergonomics....
, environmental social sciences, architectural psychology, socio-architecture
Socio-architecture

Socio-architecture is a phrase coined by psychologist Humphry Osmond and Canadian architect Kyo Izumi as part of their research for the best architectural form for Osmond's Weyburn, Saskatchewan mental hospital in 1951....
, ecological psychology
Ecological psychology

Ecological psychology is a term claimed by a number of schools of psychology. However, the two main ones are one on the writings of J. J. Gibson, and another on the work of Roger Barker, Herb Wright and associates at the University of Kansas in Lawrence....
, ecopsychology
Ecopsychology

Ecopsychology connects psychology and ecology. The political and practical implications are to show humans ways of healing social alienation and to build a sane society and a sustainable culture....
, behavioral geography
Behavioral geography

Behavioral geography is an approach to Human Geography that examines human behavior using a disaggregate approach. Behavioral Geographers focus on the cognitive processes underlying spatial reasoning, decision making, and behavior....
, environment-behavior studies, person-environment studies, environmental sociology, social ecology
Social ecology

Social Ecology is a philosophy developed by Murray Bookchin in the 1960s.It holds that present environmental issues are rooted in deep-seated social problems, particularly in dominatory hierarchical political and social systems....
, and environmental design research.

Challenges


The field has seen significant research findings and a fair surge of interest in the late 1970s and early 1980s, but has challenges of nomenclature, obtaining objective and repeatable results, scope, and the fact that some research rests on underlying assumptions about human perception, which is not fully understood.

In the words of Guido Francescato, speaking in 2000, environmental psychology encompasses a "somewhat bewildering array of disparate methodologies, conceptual orientations, and interpretations... making it difficult to delineate, with any degree of precision, just what the field is all about and what might it contribute to the construction of society and the unfolding of history."

Behavior settings


The first significant findings in environmental psychology can be traced back to researcher Roger Barker
Roger Barker

Roger Garlock Barker was a social scientist, a founder of environmental psychology and a leading figure in the field for decades, perhaps best known for his development of the concept of behavior settings....
, who founded his research station in the tiny Kansas town of Oskaloosa (renamed "Midwest" for publication) in 1947, and ran it for several decades.

From detailed field observations he developed the theory that social settings influence behavior. In a store, people assume their roles as customers; in school and church, proper behavior somehow already resides coded in the place. Barker spent his career expanding on what he called ecological psychology
Ecological psychology

Ecological psychology is a term claimed by a number of schools of psychology. However, the two main ones are one on the writings of J. J. Gibson, and another on the work of Roger Barker, Herb Wright and associates at the University of Kansas in Lawrence....
, identifying these behavior settings, and publishing accounts like "One Boy's Day" (1951). Some of the minute-by-minute observations of Kansan children from morning to night, jotted down by young and maternal graduate students, may be the most intimate and poignant documents in social science. The "behavior setting" remains a valid principle which receives serious attention.

Barker argued that the psychologist should use T-Methods (psychologist as 'transducer': i.e. methods which study man in his 'natural environment') rather than O-Methods (psychologist as "operator" i.e. experimental methods). In other words, he preferred field work and direct observation.

Universities Offering Ecopsychology-related Courses of Study

The University of Surrey
University of Surrey

The University of Surrey is a university located within the county town of Guildford, Surrey in the South East England of England. It received its Royal Charter on 9 September 1966, and was previously situated near Battersea Park in south-west London....
 was the institution which offered the first achitechtural psychology course in the UK starting in 1973/74 and since then there have been over 300 graduates from over 25 countries. Other Universities in the UK now offer courses on the subject which is an expanding field. The Environmental Psychology Research Group (EPRG), of which students on the MSc in Environmental Psychology are automatically members, has been undertaking research for more than thirty years.

The University of Michigan offers a Master of Sciences degree in Natural Resources and Environment, with one concentration called "Behavior, Education, and Communication". The focus is on how people form their relationships with the natural world, including how they make environmentally-related consumer decisions, as well as a focus on how "nearby nature" effects people's mental and physical health.

The Environmental Psychology PhD Program at The Graduate Center takes a multidisciplinary approach to examining and changing "the serious problems associated with the urban environment with a view towards affecting public policy" using social science theory and research methods. The GC-CUNY was the first academic institution in the U.S. to grant a PhD in Environmental Psychology. As discussed in detail, on the program website; "recent research has addressed the experiences of recently housed homeless people, the privatization of public space, socio-spatial conflicts, children's safety in the public environment, relocation, community based approaches to housing, the design of specialized environments such as museums, zoos, gardens and hospitals, the changing relationships between home, family and work, the environmental experiences of gay men and lesbians, and access to parks and other urban 'green spaces.'" see also The Center for Human Environments.

Another strain of environmental psychology developed out of ergonomics in the 1960s. The beginning of this movement can be traced back to David Canter's work and the founding of the "Performance Research Unit" at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1966, which expanded traditional ergonomics to study broader issues relating to the environment and the extent to which human beings were "situated" within it (cf situated cognition). Canter led the field in the UK for years and was the editor of the Journal of Environmental Psychology for over 20 years, but has recently turned his attention to criminology.

Applications


Impact on the built environment


Ultimately, environmental psychology is oriented towards influencing the work of design professionals (architects, engineers, interior designers, urban planners, etc.) and thereby improving the human environment.

On a civic scale, efforts towards improving pedestrian landscapes have paid off to some extent, involving figures like Jane Jacobs
Jane Jacobs

Jane Jacobs, Order of Canada, Order of Ontario was an United States-born Canadian urbanist, writer and activist. She is best known for ?The Death and Life of Great American Cities? , a powerful critique of the urban renewal policies of the 1950s in the United States....
 and Copenhagen
Copenhagen

Copenhagen is the capital and largest city of Denmark, with an urban area with a population of 1,153,615 . Copenhagen is situated on the Islands of Zealand and Amager....
's Jan Gehl
Jan Gehl

Jan Gehl is a Denmark architect and urban design consultant based in Copenhagen and whose career has focused on improving the quality of pedestrian urban life....
. One prime figure here is the late writer and researcher William H. Whyte
William H. Whyte

William Hollingsworth "Holly" Whyte was an American sociology, journalism, and peoplewatcher.Whyte was born in West Chester, Pennsylvania in 1917 and died in New York City in 1999....
 and his still-refreshing and perceptive "City", based on his accumulated observations of skilled Manhattan pedestrians, steps, and patterns of use in urban plazas.

No equivalent organized knowledge of environmental psychology has developed out of architecture. Most prominent American architects, led until recently by Philip Johnson
Philip Johnson

Philip Cortelyou Johnson was an influential American architect. With his thick, round-framed glasses, Johnson was the most recognizable figure in American architecture for decades....
 who was very strong on this point, view their job as an art form. They see little or no responsibility for the social or functional impact of their designs, which was highlighted with failure of public high-rise housing
Public housing

Public housing is a form of housing tenure in which the property is owned by a government authority, which may be central or local. Social housing is an umbrella term referring to rental housing which may be owned and managed by the state, by not-for-profit organizations, or by a combination of the two, usually with the aim of providi...
 like Pruitt Igoe.

Environmental psychology has conquered one whole architectural genre, although it's a bitter victory: retail stores, and any other commercial venue where the power to manipulate the mood and behavior of customers, places like stadiums, casinos, malls, and now airports. From Philip Kotler
Philip Kotler

Philip Kotler is the S.G. Johnson & Son Distinguished Professor of International Marketing at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University....
's landmark paper on Atmospherics and Alan Hirsch's "Effects of Ambient Odors on Slot-Machine Usage in a Las Vegas Casino", through the creation and management of the Gruen transfer
Gruen transfer

In shopping mall design, the Gruen transfer refers to the moment when consumers respond to "scripted disorientation" cues in the environment. It is named for Austrian architect Victor Gruen ....
, retail relies heavily on psychology, original research, focus groups, and direct observation. One of William Whyte's students, Paco Underhill
Paco Underhill

Paco Underhill is an environmental psychologist, the author of the books Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping and Call of the Mall: The Geography of Shopping, and the founder of a market research and consulting company called Envirosell....
, makes a living as a "shopping anthropologist". Most of this most-advanced research remains a trade secret and proprietary.

Density and crowding

As environmental psychologists have theorized that density and crowding can have an adverse effect on mood and even cause stress-related illness. Accordingly, environmental and architectural designs could be adapted to minimize the effects of crowding in situations when crowding cannot be avoided. Factors that reduce feelings of crowding within buildings include:
  • Windows, particularly openable ones, and ones that provide a view as well as light
  • High ceilings
  • Doors to divide spaces (Baum and Davies) and provide access control
  • Room shape: square rooms feel less crowded than rectangular ones (Dresor)
  • Using partitions to create smaller, personalized spaces within an open plan office or larger work space.
  • Providing increases in cognitive control over aspects of the internal environment, such as ventilation, light, privacy, etc.
  • Conducting a cognitive appraisal of an environment and feelings of crowding in different settings. For example, one might be comfortable with crowding at a concert but not in school corridors.
  • Creating a defensible space
    Defensible space

    Defensible space is a concept first proposed by the architect Oscar Newman and developed further by Alice Coleman. It is the idea that crime and delinquency can be controlled and mitigated through environmental design....
     (Calhoun)


Noise

Noise increases environmental stress. Although it has been found that control and predictability are the greatest factors in stressful effects of noise; context, pitch, source and habituation are also important variables .

Personal space and territory
Having an area of personal territory in a public space e.g. at the office is a key feature of many architectural designs. Having such a 'defensible space' (term coined by Calhoun during his experiment on rats) can reduce the negative effects of crowding in urban environments. Creation of personal space is achieved by placing barriers and personalising the space, for example using pictures of one's family. This increases cognitive control as one sees oneself as having control over the entrants to the personal space and therefore able to control the level of density and crowding in the space.

Environmental cognition

Environmental cognition (involved in human cognition) plays a crucial role in environmental perception. The orbitofrontal cortex in the brain plays a role in environmental judgment.

Other contributors


Other significant researchers and writers in this field include:
  • Irwin Altman
    Irwin Altman

    Irwin Altman, also known as Irv Altman, was born on July 16 1930 in New York City, New York. Altman is a list of social psychologists who earned his B.A....
  • Jay Appleton, British geographer who proposed 'habitat theory' and advanced the notion of 'prospect and refuge'
  • David Chapin Professor of Environmental Psychology, The Graduate Center, City University of New York
  • Anita Blanchard, who applied behavior setting theory to "Virtual Behavior Settings", expanding Wicker's work into computer-mediated environments.
  • Alain de Botton
    Alain de Botton

    Alain de Botton, is a British writer and television producer. His books and television programmes discuss various subjects in a somewhat Philosophy style while maintaining relevance to everyday life....
  • Karen Franck
  • Robert Gifford
    Robert Gifford

    Robert Gifford is Professor of Psychology and Environmental Studies at the University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. He is an environmental psychologist whose main research interests are environmental psychology, social psychology, and personality psychology....
    , current Editor of the Journal of Environmental Psychology and author of Environmental Psychology: Principles and Practice (4th edition, 2007).
  • J.J. Gibson, best known for coining the word affordance
    Affordance

    An affordance is a quality of an object, or an environment, that allows an individual to perform an action. The term is used in a variety of fields: perceptual psychology, cognitive psychology, Environmental Psychology, industrial design, human?computer interaction , interaction design and artificial intelligence....
    , a description of what the environment offers the animal in terms of action
  • Paul Gump, who continued Barker's work in Oskaloosa and did the seminal "Boy's Camp" and "Big School, Small School" studies (with Barker)
  • Roger Hart
    Roger Hart

    Roger A. Hart is a Professor in the Environmental Psychology Doctor of Philosophy Program of the Graduate Center of the City University of New York....
     Professor of Environmental Psychology, The Graduate Center, City University of New York
  • Daniel Henry, who applied classic theories of behavior settings to online built environments, and coined the term "Computer-Mediated Behavior Settings".
  • Bill Hillier and space syntax
    Space syntax

    The term space syntax encompasses a set of theories and techniques for the analysis of spatial configurations. Originally it was conceived by Bill Hillier, Julienne Hanson and colleagues at The Bartlett, University College London in the late 1970s to early 1980s as a tool to help architects simulate the likely social effects of their designs...
  • C. Ray Jeffery coined the phrase Crime Prevention Through Urban Design or CPTED
  • Rachel and Stephen Kaplan
    Rachel and Stephen Kaplan

    Rachel and Stephen Kaplan are renowned in the field of environmental psychology. Professors of psychology at the University of Michigan, the Kaplans are known for their research on the effect of nature on people?s relationships and health....
  • Cindi Katz
    Cindi Katz

    Cindi Katz , a geographer, is a Professor in Environmental Psychology, Earth and Environmental Sciences, and Women's Studies at the CUNY Graduate Center....
     Professor of Environmental Psychology, The Graduate Center, City University of New York
  • Setha Low
    Setha Low

    Setha Low is the current president of the American Anthropological Association, a professor in environmental psychology, and the director of the Public Space Research Group at the City University of New York....
     Professor of Environmental Psychology, The Graduate Center, City University of New York
  • Kevin A. Lynch
    Kevin A. Lynch

    Kevin Andrew Lynch , American urban planner and author.Lynch studied at Yale University, Taliesin under Frank Lloyd Wright, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and received a Bachelor's degree in city planning from MIT in 1947....
     and his research into the formation of mental maps
  • Francis McAndrew: Environmental Psychology textbook
  • Bill Mollison
    Bill Mollison

    Bruce Charles 'Bill' Mollison is a researcher, author, scientist, teacher, naturalist and has been called the 'father of permaculture', an integrated system of design co-developed with David Holmgren that encompasses not only agriculture, horticulture, architecture and ecology but also economic systems, land access strategies and legal syste...
     developed the Environmental Psychology Unit at the University of Tasmania
    University of Tasmania

    The University of Tasmania is an Australian university, with three campuses in Tasmania. A 'Sandstone universities', it is the fourth-oldest university in Australia....
  • Harold Proshansky
  • Amos Rapoport
    Amos Rapoport

    Born in 1929 in Warsaw, Poland, Amos Rapoport is the author of the book House, Form & Culture - which talks about how culture, human behavior, and the environment affect house form....
  • Leanne Rivlin
    Leanne Rivlin

    Leanne Rivlin was an originator of the Environmental Psychology Doctoral Program at the CUNY Graduate Center in the late 1960s....
     Professor of Environmental Psychology, The Graduate Center, City University of New York
  • Edward Sadalla
  • Susan Saegert
    Susan Saegert

    Susan Saegert is Professor of Human and Organizational Development at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN.Prior to her current appointment in 2008, Dr....
    , director of the Center for Human Environments at the City University of New York
    City University of New York

    Not to be confused with New York University formerly known as the University of the City of New York.For similar uses see University of New York...
  • Phil Schoggen, who worked with Barker and Wright in Oskaloosa and published the seminal book "Behavior Settings" which summarizes and expands the theory.
  • Myrtle Scott, who applied behavior setting theory to special education and industrial settings, and who taught eco-environmental psychology at Indiana University.
  • Robert Sommer
    Robert Sommer

    Robert Sommer is a Distinguished Professor of Psychology Emeritus at the University of California, Davis.He may be best known for his book Personal Space: The Behavioral Basis of Design ....
    , a pioneer of the field who first studied personal space in the 1950s and is perhaps best known for his 1969 book Personal Space: The Behavioral Basis of Design, but is also the author of numerous other books, including Design Awareness, and hundreds of articles.
  • Roger Ulrich
  • Alan Wicker, who expanded behavior setting theories to include other areas of study, including qualitative research, and social psychology.
  • Gary Winkel
    Gary Winkel

    Gary Winkel is a Professor of Environmental Psychology at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York He received his Ph.D. in psychology at the University of Washington with a minor in quantitative methods....
     Professor of Environmental Psychology, The Graduate Center, City University of New York


See also

  • Aesthetics
    Aesthetics

    Aesthetics or esthetics is commonly known as the study of senses or sensori-emotional values, sometimes called judgments of sentiment and taste ....
  • Architecture
    Architecture

    The term architecture can refer to a process, a profession or documentation.As a process, architecture is the activity of designing and construction buildings and other physical structures by a person or a computer, primarily to provide shelter....
  • Behavioural sciences
    Behavioural sciences

    Behavioural science is a term that encompasses all the disciplines that explore the activities of and interactions among organisms in the natural world....
  • Connectedness to nature scale
    Connectedness to nature scale

    The connectedness to nature scale is a measure of individuals' trait levels of feeling emotionally connected to the natural world in the realm of social and environmental psychology....
  • Ecopsychology
    Ecopsychology

    Ecopsychology connects psychology and ecology. The political and practical implications are to show humans ways of healing social alienation and to build a sane society and a sustainable culture....
  • Environmental dependence syndrome
    Environmental dependence syndrome

    Environmental dependence syndrome is a syndrome where the affected individual relies on environmental cues to accomplish goals or tasks. It implies a disorder in personal autonomy where individual psychological traits influenced the way in which loss of autonomy was made manifest....
  • Environmental design
    Environmental design

    Environmental design is the process of addressing Natural environment parameters when devising plans, programs, policies, buildings, or products....
  • Environmental design and planning
    Environmental design and planning

    Environmental design and planning is the moniker used by several Ph.D. programs that take a multidisciplinary approach to the built environment....
  • Environmental metaphysics
    Environmental metaphysics

    Environmental metaphysics is the study of environments and their impact on people and animals. Much of what is currently being used in the field of environmental metaphysics is being labeledFeng Shui....
  • Ergonomics
    Ergonomics

    Ergonomics is the scientific discipline concerned with designing according to human needs, and the profession that applies theory, principles, data and methods to design in order to optimize human well-being and overall system performance....
  • Evolutionary psychology
    Evolutionary psychology

    Evolutionary psychology attempts to explain Mind and psychology Trait theorys?such as memory, perception, or language?as adaptations, that is, as the functional products of natural selection or sexual selection....
  • Feng Shui
    Feng shui

    Feng shui is an ancient Chinese system of aesthetics believed to utilize the Laws of both heaven and Earth to help one improve life by receiving positive Qi....
  • Healing environments
    Healing environments

    Healing environment, for healthcare buildings describes a physical setting and organizational culture that supports patients and families through the stress imposed by illness, hospitalization, medical visits, the process of healing, and sometimes, bereavement....
  • Human factors
    Human factors

    Human factors is a term that covers:* The science of understanding the properties of human capability .* The application of this understanding to the design and development of systems and services ....
  • Journal of Environmental Psychology
    Journal of Environmental Psychology

    The Journal of Environmental Psychology has been published since 1980. It is published by Elsevier and its Managing Editor, since 2002, is Professor Robert Gifford of the University of Victoria....
  • Neighborhood Watch
    Neighborhood Watch

    A neighborhood watch is an organized group of citizenship devoted to crime- and vandalism-prevention within a neighborhood. It builds on the concept of a town watch from Colonial America....
  • Psychology
    Psychology

    Psychology is an academic and applied science discipline involving the science study of human mental functions and behavior. Occasionally it also relies on symbolic hermeneutics and critical theory, although these traditions are less pronounced than in other social sciences such as sociology....
  • Social sciences
    Social sciences

    The social sciences comprise academic disciplines concerned with the study of the social life of human groups and individuals including anthropology, communication studies, economics, human geography, history, political science, psychology and sociology....
  • Urban design
    Urban design

    Urban design concerns the arrangement, appearance and functionality of towns and cities, and in particular the shaping and uses of urban public space....


External links

  • EDRA
  • IAPS