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Blue space: The importance of water for preference,affect, and restorativeness ratings of natural and built scenes
Authors:Mathew White  Amanda Smith  Kelly Humphryes  Sabine Pahl  Deborah Snelling  Michael Depledge
Institution:1. School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth, Devon PL4 8AA, UK;2. National Marine Aquarium, Plymouth, UK;3. Peninsula School of Medicine and Dentistry, Plymouth, UK
Abstract:Although theorists have suggested that aquatic environments or “blue space” might have particular restorative potential, to date there is little systematic empirical research on this issue. Indeed the presence of water has, unintentionally, been a confounding factor in research comparing people’s reactions to built and natural environments. Whereas aquatic features (rivers, lakes, coasts) are frequently present in visual stimuli representing natural environments they are rarely incorporated in stimuli portraying built environments. As many towns are, for good reason, located near water this is a potentially significant oversight. The current research collated a set of 120 photographs of natural and built scenes, half of which contained “aquatic” elements. Proportions of “aquatic”/“green”/“built” environments in each scene (e.g. 1/3rd, 2/3rds) were also standardised. Two studies investigated preferences (attractiveness, willingness to visit and willingness to pay for a hotel room with the view), affect and perceived restorativeness ratings for these photographs. As predicted, both natural and built scenes containing water were associated with higher preferences, greater positive affect and higher perceived restorativeness than those without water. Effect sizes were consistently large. Intriguingly, images of “built” environments containing water were generally rated just as positively as natural “green” space. We propose a number of avenues for further research including exploration of the mechanisms underlying these effects.
Keywords:Aquatic environments  Water  Preferences  Affect  Restorativeness
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