“Exploring Psychological Restoration in Favorite Indoor and Outdoor Urban Places Using a Top-Down Perspective”, 2021-12-01 (; similar):
Homes and bars, cafés were the most commonly described favorite indoor settings.
Urban parks and forests were the most popular outdoor settings.
Favorite outdoor places were rated higher on restoration and indoor in place bonding.
Personality variables were hardly related to experienced restoration.
A third of the sample experienced more restoration in the indoor setting.
Most studies on psychological restoration and favorite places have addressed restoration in green or blue outdoor settings whereas the interest around built and indoor settings has been scarce.
In this study, we analyzed restorative experiences in favorite indoor and outdoor urban places using a top-down approach by including psycho-environmental variables (nature and urban orientedness, place bonding) and personality traits (Big Five). A sample of 945 university students and staff recruited in 5 western countries (Finland, Spain, The Netherlands, UK and Australia) answered an online questionnaire.
In the linear regression models, perceived restorative potential, place attachment and place identification were the strongest predictors of subjective restoration. Personality traits did not play a statistically-significant role in restorative experiences.
This work extends restoration research by considering the role of indoor, as well as outdoor environments and highlights the role of certain top-down characteristics in restorative experiences.
[Keywords: indoor environment, outdoor environment, stress recovery, Restoration Outcome Scale, place attachment]