A framework for understanding the human experience of nature through cognitive mapping

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

A framework for understanding the human experience of nature through cognitive mapping. / Dan-Rakedzon, Nitzan ; Fleming, Whitney; Lissovsky, Nurit et al.
In: Conservation Biology, 25.04.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

APA

Dan-Rakedzon, N., Fleming, W., Lissovsky, N., Clayton, S., & Shwartz, A. (2024). A framework for understanding the human experience of nature through cognitive mapping. Conservation Biology, Article e14283. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.14283

CBE

Dan-Rakedzon N, Fleming W, Lissovsky N, Clayton S, Shwartz A. 2024. A framework for understanding the human experience of nature through cognitive mapping. Conservation Biology. Article e14283. https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.14283

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Dan-Rakedzon N, Fleming W, Lissovsky N, Clayton S, Shwartz A. A framework for understanding the human experience of nature through cognitive mapping. Conservation Biology. 2024 Apr 25;e14283. Epub 2024 Apr 25. doi: 10.1111/cobi.14283

Author

Dan-Rakedzon, Nitzan ; Fleming, Whitney ; Lissovsky, Nurit et al. / A framework for understanding the human experience of nature through cognitive mapping. In: Conservation Biology. 2024.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A framework for understanding the human experience of nature through cognitive mapping

AU - Dan-Rakedzon, Nitzan

AU - Fleming, Whitney

AU - Lissovsky, Nurit

AU - Clayton, Susan

AU - Shwartz, Assaf

PY - 2024/4/25

Y1 - 2024/4/25

N2 - Human behavior is a key driver of the biodiversity crisis, and addressing it requires changing individual choices and actions. Yet, the same processes that imperil biodiversity (e.g., urbanization) also alienate people from the experience of nature, eroding care for the natural world. Although averting this extinction of experience is increasingly recognized as a major contemporary conservation challenge, understanding of what constitutes nature experience remains elusive and few empirical studies have explored it directly. Most researchers have used nature interactions as a stand-in for experience, even though experience extends beyond interactions. We aimed to determine what constitutes the experience of nature and to propose a holistic, empirically derived framework that incorporates the multiple dimensions and components of the experience of nature. Using a mixed-method approach across 3 countries (the United States, Switzerland, and Israel), we conducted a multistage, conceptual content, cognitive mapping (3CM) exercise with 106 participants. This methodology included developing a prompt to capture participants' perceptions of nature experiences and subsequently refining and organizing their input into distinct components and underlying dimensions through an iterative engagement process. Beyond multisensory interactions with nature, experience of nature consisted of 2 dimensions: the circumstances in which interactions occur and the internal responses that encompass various cognitive, affective, and restorative benefits associated with nature interactions. These 3 dimensions had 33 components that occurred consistently across participants in the 3 countries. Frequently mentioned components included seeing animals, landscapes, or scenery; lack of human influence; weather conditions; relaxing, recharging; feeling good; and awe for nature. Fear and nature experienced at home were the least mentioned components. Together, our results showed that nature experience is a combination of nature interactions, circumstances, and internal responses. The emphasized components underscore the significance of offering access to extensive, less human-influenced natural spaces. This in turn can foster a profound nature experience, cultivating feelings of connectedness and care for nature. [Abstract copyright: © 2024 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.]

AB - Human behavior is a key driver of the biodiversity crisis, and addressing it requires changing individual choices and actions. Yet, the same processes that imperil biodiversity (e.g., urbanization) also alienate people from the experience of nature, eroding care for the natural world. Although averting this extinction of experience is increasingly recognized as a major contemporary conservation challenge, understanding of what constitutes nature experience remains elusive and few empirical studies have explored it directly. Most researchers have used nature interactions as a stand-in for experience, even though experience extends beyond interactions. We aimed to determine what constitutes the experience of nature and to propose a holistic, empirically derived framework that incorporates the multiple dimensions and components of the experience of nature. Using a mixed-method approach across 3 countries (the United States, Switzerland, and Israel), we conducted a multistage, conceptual content, cognitive mapping (3CM) exercise with 106 participants. This methodology included developing a prompt to capture participants' perceptions of nature experiences and subsequently refining and organizing their input into distinct components and underlying dimensions through an iterative engagement process. Beyond multisensory interactions with nature, experience of nature consisted of 2 dimensions: the circumstances in which interactions occur and the internal responses that encompass various cognitive, affective, and restorative benefits associated with nature interactions. These 3 dimensions had 33 components that occurred consistently across participants in the 3 countries. Frequently mentioned components included seeing animals, landscapes, or scenery; lack of human influence; weather conditions; relaxing, recharging; feeling good; and awe for nature. Fear and nature experienced at home were the least mentioned components. Together, our results showed that nature experience is a combination of nature interactions, circumstances, and internal responses. The emphasized components underscore the significance of offering access to extensive, less human-influenced natural spaces. This in turn can foster a profound nature experience, cultivating feelings of connectedness and care for nature. [Abstract copyright: © 2024 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.]

U2 - 10.1111/cobi.14283

DO - 10.1111/cobi.14283

M3 - Article

JO - Conservation Biology

JF - Conservation Biology

SN - 0888-8892

M1 - e14283

ER -