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Restorative and Afflicting Qualities of the Microspace Encounter: Psychophysiological Reactions to the Spaces of the City

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posted on 2022-11-04, 16:28 authored by T Osborne

There is a long-standing narrative within health research that nature (or green space) is beneficial for health, whereas urban (or gray spaces) are not. This prior research often focuses on broad, often binary, nature–urban categorizations rather than the particular qualities of the microspace encounter, stimulating embodied stress or restorative human reactions. Drawing on the findings of an interdisciplinary and exploratory mixed-methods study investigating how people physiologically respond to their environment, this article discusses the microspace encounters that can evoke restorative and afflicting human responses. In doing so, this article demonstrates the strengths of combining biosensing technology with qualitative methods but stresses that narrative and psychophysiological capture only identifies a small aspect of an experience.

Funding

University of Birmingham ESRC Doctoral Training Centre DTG 2011

Economic and Social Research Council

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Meaningful Mobility project funded by the European Research Council (802202).

History

Author affiliation

School of Geography, Geology and Environment, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Annals of the American Association of Geographers

Volume

112

Issue

5

Pagination

1461 - 1483

Publisher

Informa UK Limited

issn

2469-4452

eissn

2469-4460

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-11-04

Language

en

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