Does viewing nature and urban environments change neuro-cognitive markers of attention?
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Abstract
Demands on directed attention can result in attentional fatigue, inhibiting our ability to voluntarily direct attention to important features of our surroundings. Inherently fascinating environments, such as nature, have been shown to promote recovery of attention while environments that do not possess these qualities, such as urban settings, do not promote recovery. Previous research has demonstrated benefits associated with exposure to nature including improved physiological and mental health, and increased performance in attention tasks. The goal of the current research was to utilise the P3 cognitive component of the event-related potential (ERP), which has been shown to be modulated by attentional demands, as a cognitive marker indicative of attentional recovery. We measured electroencephalography (EEG) data while participants simultaneously completed an auditory oddball task and viewed images of nature and urban scenes. A replication was attempted using the Attention Network Task (ANT) to show that the restorative qualities of nature influence executive, voluntary attention rather than involuntary attention. Contrary to our predictions, no significant differences in the P3 component were observed and we were unable to successfully replicate previous research using the ANT. However, significant differences were found in earlier EEG components which suggest that the auditory stimuli are being processed differently depending on the scene displayed. EEG differences were also found following presentation of the scenes themselves and are consistent with previous research related to differences in scene complexity, contrast, and other characteristics. Further research needs to focus on these auditory and visual EEG differences to better understand neural correlates associated with the restorative benefits of natural environments.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00