La felicit脿 nella luce della sera

A new app will crowdsource data to help scientists understand the relationship between biodiversity and wellbeing. 探花直播app, developed at the 探花直播 of Cambridge, maps happiness onto a detailed map that includes all the UK鈥檚 nature reserves and green spaces.听

Apps provide a great way of collecting data from thousands 鈥 possibly tens of thousands 鈥 of users, a scale that is just not possible in lab experiments

Laurie Parma

NatureBuzz, which is available to download free on iOS and Android platforms, asks participants three times per day to answer questions about how they feel, whether they are outside or indoors, who they are with, and what they are doing. At the same time, it records their location using GPS data.

NatureBuzz also provides information about UK nature reserves and 鈥榩rotected areas鈥 and will provide users with feedback on how their happiness has fluctuated, where it was highest, with whom and during which activities.

鈥淎pps provide a great way of collecting data from thousands 鈥 possibly tens of thousands 鈥 of users, a scale that is just not possible in lab experiments,鈥 explains research associate Laurie Parma from the Department of Psychology, who coordinates the study. 鈥淲e鈥檒l use this data to answer some fascinating and potentially very important questions about our relationship with nature.鈥

Studies have suggested that people are happier and reinvigorated when living in more natural settings. For example, a 2011 study from the United States found that people who live in inner cities were the least happy, while those who live in rural areas are the happiest. However, it is not clear whether all green spaces promote happiness equally.

Diversity 鈥 the number and abundance of different species in particular systems 鈥 is thought to be important in increasing the resilience of some so-called ecosystem services听 - such as climate regulation and pest control 鈥 that underpin human wellbeing. However, the more immediate role that biodiversity may play in affecting happiness is unclear.

鈥淲e know that people quickly become familiar with 鈥 and immune to 鈥 happiness-inducing stimuli and one potential way to combat this phenomenon is to provide new and varied stimuli,鈥 adds Professor Andrew Balmford from the Department of Zoology. 鈥淣atural environments with greater biodiversity 鈥 different flowers, different birds, for example 鈥 present a rich variety of stimuli, so it鈥檚 possible they will keep the 鈥榟appiness factor鈥 fresh for visitors.鈥

探花直播researchers hope that by crowdsourcing data, they will be able to answer questions such as whether the type of green space 鈥 gardens, city parks, countryside or nature reserves, for example 鈥 have the same impact on an individual鈥檚 wellbeing, and whether someone needs to be interested in nature to benefit more from the natural environment. They believe their findings may have important consequences for how policymakers promote biodiversity and how reserve managers enable people to make the most of the happiness-improving potential of access to nature.

探花直播app is part of a broader study of happiness and nature developed by the Departments of Psychology and Zoology, 探花直播 of Cambridge, RSPB, UNEP-WCMC and Cardiff 探花直播. It is funded by the Cambridge Conservation Initiative and is part of a research programme on human happiness.

NatureBuzz is available to download from the and from .



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