The nature effect in motion: visual exposure to environmental scenes impacts cognitive load and human gait kinematics

Author:

Burtan D.1ORCID,Joyce K.1ORCID,Burn J. F.2,Handy T. C.3,Ho S.3,Leonards U.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychological Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK

2. Queen's School of Engineering, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK

3. Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

Prolonged exposure to urban environments requires higher cognitive processing resources than exposure to nature environments, even if only visual cues are available. Here, we explored the moment-to-moment impact of environment type on visual cognitive processing load, measuring gait kinematics and reaction times. In Experiment 1, participants ( n = 20) walked toward nature and urban images projected in front of them, one image per walk, and rated each image for visual discomfort. Gait speed and step length decreased for exposure to urban as compared with nature scenes in line with gait changes observed during verbal cognitive load tasks. We teased apart factors that might contribute to cognitive load: image statistics and visual discomfort. Gait changes correlated with subjective ratings of visual discomfort and their interaction with the environment but not with low-level image statistics. In Experiment 2, participants ( n = 45) performed a classic shape discrimination task with the same environmental scenes serving as task-irrelevant distractors. Shape discrimination was slower when urban scenes were presented, suggesting that it is harder to disengage attention from urban than from nature scenes. This provides converging evidence that increased cognitive demands posed by exposure to urban scenes can be measured with gait kinematics and reaction times even for short exposure times.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Faculty of Science, University of Bristol

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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