» Articles » PMID: 28557512

The Nature-disorder Paradox: A Perceptual Study on How Nature is Disorderly Yet Aesthetically Preferred

Overview
Specialty Psychology
Date 2017 May 31
PMID 28557512
Citations 8
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Natural environments have powerful aesthetic appeal linked to their capacity for psychological restoration. In contrast, disorderly environments are aesthetically aversive, and have various detrimental psychological effects. But in our research, we have repeatedly found that natural environments are perceptually disorderly. What could explain this paradox? We present 3 competing hypotheses: the aesthetic preference for naturalness is more powerful than the aesthetic aversion to disorder (the ); disorder is trivial to aesthetic preference in natural contexts (the ); and disorder is aesthetically preferred in natural contexts (the ). Utilizing novel methods of perceptual study and diverse stimuli, we rule in the nature-trumps-disorder hypothesis and rule out the harmless-disorder and beneficial-disorder hypotheses. In examining perceptual mechanisms, we find evidence that high-level scene semantics are both and for the nature-trumps-disorder effect. Necessity is evidenced by the effect disappearing in experiments utilizing only low-level visual stimuli (i.e., where scene semantics have been removed) and experiments utilizing a rapid-scene-presentation procedure that obscures scene semantics. Sufficiency is evidenced by the effect reappearing in experiments utilizing noun stimuli which remove low-level visual features. Furthermore, we present evidence that the interaction of scene semantics with low-level visual features the nature-trumps-disorder effect-the effect is weaker both when statistically adjusting for quantified low-level visual features and when using noun stimuli which remove low-level visual features. These results have implications for psychological theories bearing on the joint influence of low- and high-level perceptual inputs on affect and cognition, as well as for aesthetic design. (PsycINFO Database Record

Citing Articles

Self-Relevance Predicts the Aesthetic Appeal of Real and Synthetic Artworks Generated via Neural Style Transfer.

Vessel E, Pasqualette L, Uran C, Koldehoff S, Bignardi G, Vinck M Psychol Sci. 2023; 34(9):1007-1023.

PMID: 37578091 PMC: 7616853. DOI: 10.1177/09567976231188107.


Elementary Classroom Views of Nature Are Associated with Lower Child Externalizing Behavior Problems.

Pearson A, Brown C, Reuben A, Nicholls N, Pfeiffer K, Clevenger K Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023; 20(9).

PMID: 37174172 PMC: 10177887. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph20095653.


Increased Use of Porch or Backyard Nature during COVID-19 Associated with Lower Stress and Better Symptom Experience among Breast Cancer Patients.

Pearson A, Breeze V, Reuben A, Wyatt G Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021; 18(17).

PMID: 34501691 PMC: 8430585. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18179102.


Implicit Associations With Nature and Urban Environments: Effects of Lower-Level Processed Image Properties.

Menzel C, Reese G Front Psychol. 2021; 12:591403.

PMID: 34093298 PMC: 8172784. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.591403.


The affective benefits of nature exposure: What's nature got to do with it?.

Meidenbauer K, Stenfors C, Bratman G, Gross J, Schertz K, Choe K J Environ Psychol. 2020; 72:101498.

PMID: 32982008 PMC: 7500282. DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvp.2020.101498.