Wildlife and public perceptions of opportunities for psychological restoration in local natural settings

Maria Johansson, Terry Hartig, Jens Frank, Anders Flykt
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Wildlife might be important to psychologically restorative values and disvalues of nature, as interactions with wildlife could trigger both positive and negative feelings. Research on positive experiences of human–wildlife interactions has largely involved participants who voluntarily sought out wildlife experiences or it has addressed encounters with non‐threatening animals in urban green spaces. Less is known about the opportunities for psychological restoration in landscapes shared with mammals that are perceived to pose a threat to human activities and health. This study provides a nuanced understanding of the role of wildlife in public perceptions of the restorative potential and experience of psychological restoration in local natural settings. Twenty‐eight participants (15 women, 13 men, 18–75 years) took part in focus group interviews subject to a reflexive thematic analysis. As an analytical framework, we used a theoretical model for how people appraise the relevance, implications, coping potential and norm congruence of human–wildlife interactions and how such appraisals may support or hinder the restoration experienced in local natural settings. Relevance appraisals revealed shifts in consideration of the presence of wildlife from an integrated part of the natural scenery (background) to a distinct figure (foreground). Implication appraisals revealed that wildlife encounters would hinder the experienced psychological restoration if the animal was appraised as dangerous, disgusting, causing a nuisance or destructive. Wildlife encounters would promote restoration if the animal displayed attractive traits, features or fascinating behaviour or movements, and if it opened engaging interaction situations. Coping strategies perceived as feasible to deal with negative implications of wildlife involved avoidance of the local natural setting, preparatory behaviour displayed before a visit and precautionary behaviour displayed during the visit. Important public health effects might be gained if wildlife policy and management explicitly consider what animals mean to the perceived restorative potential of local natural settings. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
野生动物和公众对当地自然环境中心理修复机会的看法
野生动物可能对心理上恢复对自然的价值观和否定价值观非常重要,因为与野生动物的互动既可能引发积极的情感,也可能引发消极的情感。有关人类与野生动物互动的积极体验的研究主要涉及自愿寻求野生动物体验的参与者,或者是在城市绿地中与无威胁性动物的接触。这项研究提供了一个细致入微的理解,即野生动物在公众对当地自然环境中的恢复潜力和心理恢复体验的看法中所扮演的角色。28 名参与者(15 名女性,13 名男性,18-75 岁)参加了焦点小组访谈,并对访谈进行了反思性主题分析。作为分析框架,我们使用了一个理论模型来说明人们如何评价人类与野生动物互动的相关性、影响、应对潜力和规范一致性,以及这种评价如何支持或阻碍在当地自然环境中的心理恢复。相关性评价显示,人们对野生动物存在的考虑发生了转变,从自然风景的一个组成部分(背景)转变为一个独特的形象(前景)。影响评价显示,如果野生动物被认为是危险的、令人厌恶的、造成滋扰或具有破坏性,那么与野生动物的相遇将阻碍人们心理上的恢复。如果野生动物表现出吸引人的特征、特点或迷人的行为或动作,并且开启了引人入胜的互动情境,那么与野生动物的接触将促进心理恢复。如果野生动物政策和管理部门明确考虑到动物对当地自然环境的恢复潜力意味着什么,那么可能会获得重要的公共卫生效果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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