Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA; Population Health Sciences Program, Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Environ Int. 2020 Mar;136:105427. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2019.105427. Epub 2019 Dec 24.
Previous research has demonstrated the positive associations between outdoor nature contact and stress reduction. However, similar effects of incorporating natural elements into indoor environment (i.e. biophilic design) have been less well studied. We hypothesize that exposure to biophilic indoor environments help people recover from stress and anxiety and those effects differ among different types of biophilic elements. To test these hypotheses, we conducted a between-subjects experiment with 100 participants using virtual reality (VR). Participants were randomly assigned to experience one of four virtual offices (i.e. one non-biophilic base office and three similar offices enhanced with different biophilic design elements) after stressor tasks. Their physiological indicators of stress reaction, including heart rate variability, heart rate, skin conductance level and blood pressure, were measured by bio-monitoring sensors. Their anxiety level was measured by using State-Trait Anxiety Inventory test (short version). We found that participants in biophilic indoor environments had consistently better recovery responses after stressor compare to those in the non-biophilic environment, in terms of reduction on stress and anxiety. Effects on physiological responses are immediate after exposure to biophilic environments with the larger impacts in the first four minutes of the 6-minute recovery process. Additionally, these restorative effects differ among three different types of indoor biophilic environments. This research provides evidence that biophilic design elements that impact stress recovery and anxiety. It also demonstrated the potential that virtual reality may be a way to bring nature and its therapeutic benefits to patients in hospitals.
先前的研究表明,与户外自然接触和减轻压力之间存在积极关联。然而,将自然元素融入室内环境(即仿生设计)的类似效果研究较少。我们假设,暴露于仿生室内环境有助于人们从压力和焦虑中恢复过来,并且这些效果因不同类型的仿生元素而异。为了检验这些假设,我们使用虚拟现实(VR)对 100 名参与者进行了一项被试间实验。参与者在应激任务后被随机分配到体验四种虚拟办公室之一(即一个非仿生基础办公室和三个具有不同仿生设计元素的类似办公室)。通过生物监测传感器测量他们的应激反应的生理指标,包括心率变异性、心率、皮肤电导率水平和血压。使用状态-特质焦虑量表测试(简短版)测量他们的焦虑水平。我们发现,与非仿生环境相比,处于仿生室内环境中的参与者在应激后具有更一致的恢复反应,在减轻压力和焦虑方面表现更好。暴露于仿生环境后的生理反应是即时的,在 6 分钟恢复过程的前 4 分钟内影响更大。此外,这三种不同类型的室内仿生环境的恢复效果不同。这项研究提供了证据表明,仿生设计元素可以影响压力恢复和焦虑。它还展示了虚拟现实可能是一种将自然及其治疗效益带给医院患者的方法。