Unit 1 Flashcards
Define environmental psychology.
Environmental Psychology is the study of the transactions between individuals and their physical setting.
Within this setting, individuals are changed by their environment and consequently, they also change their environment.
Environmental psychology includes theory research and practices with the goal of improving our relationship with our environment as well as making buildings more humane.
Identify the major forces that led to the birth of environmental psychology.
Environmental Psychology is just over 50 years old.
The major forces that led to the creation of environmental psychology included the need to include the person-environment relations into psychology.
Environmental Psychology sought to address the misuse of natural resources
Using the definitions of environmental psychology, provide two of your own examples of issues or topics studied by environmental psychologists.
The use of green spaces in those with dementia.
The impact of mandatory lock-down Covid restrictions on those with depression.
What does the word “environment” mean in environmental psychology? Illustrate your answer with two examples of your own.
The term environment relates to the wilderness , natural settings, natural resources, national parks built up areas such as schools , parks and roads
What are the two goals that environmental psychologists need to accomplish? Explain how these goals are related
To Understand person-environment transactions and to use this knowledge to solve a wide array of problems.
Summarize the value of theory and research.
A
Research provides concrete findings and information into individual/environment relations whereas theories integrates research findings while also demonstrating new areas to conduct research in.
What is the value of applying knowledge to real-life settings?
Application of knowledge to real life settings is important as the use of research in real world application can influence policy in a positve way.
Outline the characteristics that distinguish environmental psychology from other areas of psychology.
- Improve our stewardship of natural resources and the ways in which we psychologically transact with the built environment.
- Study everyday settings
- Consider the person and the entity to be holistic.
- Recognize that individuals cope with and engage with environments.
- Work in conjunction with other disciplines
Explain why Gifford says that “environmental psychology has deep roots within the field [of psychology] and is at the same time at the edge of the discipline” (p. 5).
It has always been on the edge of psychology in two sense:
It still is not part of the central core of psychology. It is not taught in every university or college, nor can it claim as many researchers as some other areas of psychology.
The main concern of environmental psychology-the physical environment- has rarely received serious attention in psychology
Nonetheless theoretical work of prestigous psychologists such as Egon Brunswik and Kurt Lewin demonstrate its grreat roots
When was environmental psychology born ? List the activities that marked the birth and growth of environmental psychology
ental psychology.
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Environmental psychology was officially born around the late 1960s, however earlier activities that marked the birth and early growth of environmental psychology include:
Brunswick’s strong advocation of representative design, which argued that research designs should include a much wider array of environmental stimuli than psychologists of the time typically employed. Brunswick and others believed that environment can and does effect people
Kurt Lewin’s field theory was one of the first to give active consideration to the molar physical environments
Lewin’s students, Roger Barker and Herbert Wright and practiced ecological psychology and studied behavioral settings (small ecological units enclosing everyday behavior). Behavior settings include both the social rules and the physical-spatial aspects of our daily lives - Barker and colleaugues worked hard to identify social and physical characteristics of different settings
By the 1950s psychologists were researching in this field even though it did not have its name such as through rated attractiveness in a nice room or and ugly room, personal space studies, and observations on behavior after rearranging furniture
Characterize the status of environmental psychology today
Environmental psychology had whisperings of origins in the 1910’s thereafter having a formal beginning in the 1950s. Environmental psychology is on the rise with an increase in the publication of papers.
Environmental psychology has taken root in many countries. What is unique about the research carried out in different countries?
Research in other countries constitutes a unique understanding of such
What are some future prospects for environmental psychology
Future prospects and challenges of environmental psychology:
Translating research into practice: Practitioners may have to become much more political to have greater impact
Further integrating and developing theory
Discovering more powerful research methods
Achieving a more coherent core:
State the underlying assumptions of the stimulation theories. List the theories that are based on these assumptions.
The stimulation theories underlying assumption is that the physical environment plays a fundamental source for sensory information.
The understanding of stimulation is contingent on the perception of stimulation itself, so as the stimulation changes, the perception and definition of the stimulation change itself.
* Adaption theory notes that stimulation changes intermittently between individuals as no person it perpetually stimulated all of the time. It notes that stimulation that is not the same as one’s adaption level changes the person’s perception of that stimulant. Eg. Getting too much sun
* Overload theory – focuses on overstimulation.
* Restricted environmental stimulation theory (REST) explores the influence and affect of stimulation which in some people can have both positive and negative effects.
* Stress theories seek to explain how behavioral and environmental changes shift as a consequence
Briefly describe and compare the adaptation-level theory, arousal theories, overload theory, and restricted environmental stimulation theory.
As above