1. There is mounting concern that people living more urbanised, modern lifestyles have fewer and lower quality interactions with nature, and therefore have limited access to the associated health and wellbeing benefits. Yet, variation in the different types of nature interactions and the factors that influence these interactions across populations are poorly understood. 2. We compared four types of nature interactions by administering surveys across two cities that differ markedly in urbanisation pattern and population density—Singapore and Brisbane—: (i) indirect (viewing nature through a window at work or at home); (ii) incidental (spending time in nature as part of work); (iii) intentional interactions in gardens; and (iv) intentional in...
There is mounting empirical evidence that interacting with nature delivers measurable benefits to pe...
Nature has shown to have many positive effects on our health and well-being as it benefi ts both ou...
The last 100 years have seen a huge change in the global structure of the human population, with the...
Urban residents can benefit from spending time in outdoor spaces and engaging with nature-related ac...
As people live more urbanised lifestyles there is potential to lose daily contact with nature, dimin...
Urban residents can benefit from spending time in outdoor spaces and engaging with nature-related ac...
Urban environments are expanding globally, and by 2050 nearly 70% of the world's population will liv...
With over half of the world’s population living in urban areas, interventions concerning human wellb...
It is widely believed that people living in cities have fewer and poorer daily experiences of nature...
Connection with nature has been associated with greater participation in a range of biodiversity con...
AbstractUrban environments are expanding globally, and by 2050 nearly 70% of the world’s population ...
A growing number of policies and programmes in cities aim to increase the time people spend in natur...
With global environmental change looming there is a call for urban societies to change behaviours an...
Conservation policy frequently assumes that increasing people's exposure to green-space enhances the...
The effects of nature interactions on multiple aspects of human subjective wellbeing are increasingl...
There is mounting empirical evidence that interacting with nature delivers measurable benefits to pe...
Nature has shown to have many positive effects on our health and well-being as it benefi ts both ou...
The last 100 years have seen a huge change in the global structure of the human population, with the...
Urban residents can benefit from spending time in outdoor spaces and engaging with nature-related ac...
As people live more urbanised lifestyles there is potential to lose daily contact with nature, dimin...
Urban residents can benefit from spending time in outdoor spaces and engaging with nature-related ac...
Urban environments are expanding globally, and by 2050 nearly 70% of the world's population will liv...
With over half of the world’s population living in urban areas, interventions concerning human wellb...
It is widely believed that people living in cities have fewer and poorer daily experiences of nature...
Connection with nature has been associated with greater participation in a range of biodiversity con...
AbstractUrban environments are expanding globally, and by 2050 nearly 70% of the world’s population ...
A growing number of policies and programmes in cities aim to increase the time people spend in natur...
With global environmental change looming there is a call for urban societies to change behaviours an...
Conservation policy frequently assumes that increasing people's exposure to green-space enhances the...
The effects of nature interactions on multiple aspects of human subjective wellbeing are increasingl...
There is mounting empirical evidence that interacting with nature delivers measurable benefits to pe...
Nature has shown to have many positive effects on our health and well-being as it benefi ts both ou...
The last 100 years have seen a huge change in the global structure of the human population, with the...