Environmental Psychology 2 - Urban environment

Environmental Psychology elective at Leiden University (2020-2021)

Lecture 2: Going Into Town (the urban environment)

Pros and cons of living in an urban environment

+ More employment opportunity 

+Cities are exciting, lively and diverse

+More cultural, educational and medical resources

- Crowdedness, information overload. 

- High density

-Pollution

-Crime

Crowdedness and density

  • Crowding is a personally defined, subjective feeling that too many others are around
  • Density: people per square meter. Not identical to the subjective state of crowdedness
  • Proximity to others can have even more adverse effects than density because of personal space invasion. Example: having to sit next to people on the train.
    • Study about this phenomena: Evans, G.W., & Wener, R.E. (2007). Crowding and personal space invasion on the train: Please don't make me sit in the middle.
  • Crowding became interpreted and studied as a specific stressor, involving:
    • Antecedents
    • Affective reaction
    • Behavorial response

Antecedents

Presence of too many others causes:
  • Goal blocking (traffic jam, waiting in line)
  • Threat of resource loss (food, shelter)
  • Loss of control (unwanted interaction)

Affective reaction:

  • Anger, annoyance  (predominantly negative)
  • Physiological reactions indicating increased arousal and stress

Behavioral response:

  • Withdrawal, avoidance
  • Filtering out information
  • Changing social environment by increased selectivity in social contacts, creating norms
  • Changing physical environment by partitioningspace, putting up fences, curtains etc.

How to deal with crowding?

  • Residences: e.g. installing screens or walls
  • Amusement parks: queuing devices

  • Campings: zoning (grouping of like minded people)

  • Prisons: huge differences between one- and more-person cells. Size is relatively unimportant. So, it is better to have one person cells, even if they are smaller

Information overload

Article on information overload in cities: Milgram (1970). The experience of living in cities.

Wirth’s (1938) sociological definition of city: large numbers, high density, heterogeneity
 
Psychological translation in Information overload (inability to process input, too many or too fast)
 
Adaptive responses:
  • Decrease time per input
  • Ignore low-priority input
  • Shift to a more passive approach
  • Impede access

Change in social responsibility:

Study: Allow strangers in the home; as a function of city size and gender (DV=% access allowed):

        City  Small town
♂      14        50
♀      40        93
  • Civility: less or different in character in cities
  • Anonymity: blessing or curse? Anonymity makes people trust eachother less, but there is also less social pressure on people (less gossiping etc)

Article: Moser, G., & Corroyer, D. (2001). Politeness in the urban environment: Is city life still synonymous with civility?:

  • Slightly different premise: Civility is an urban phenomenon
  • Tacit rules (social norms) governing social behaviors regulate social interaction
  • Civility is a form of politeness
  • Impersonal, practiced in interaction with unknown others, different from helping, which is based on perception of individual characteristics
  • To be found in public spaces of cities
  • “Behavior in the city is, in fact, paradoxical: The individual has to cooperate socially to maintain his anonymity.”

Empirical test: holding open door for next visitor:

  • Two hypotheses:

    • Politeness is less frequent in large compared to smaller city (confirmed)

    • Politeness is not sensitive to immediate population density (not confirmed)

  • Design: 2x2x2
  • Size (Paris vs. Nantes)
  • Density (high vs. low)
  • Social norm by example (holding door open vs. not)
  • Method: observations
  • Findings: 
    • Civility suffers in large cities
    • Density lowers civility
    • Social norm buffers the negative effect of large cities on civility

Privacy and civility: waiting room observation study:

  • Context: in a row of chairs, where do people sit? seat 2 is closest to where the other person sits, seat 8 is the farthest away
  • Seat 4 was most popular sitting location. Why?
    • It is impolite to sit too far away, but also privacy is important. Implicit norm for civility and privacy

Article: Canter & Larkin (1993). The environmental range of serial rapists:

  • Crimes are committed in a way that is environmentally/spatially meaningful
  • Two options:
  1. Criminal acts are done at a specific location away from the criminal’s home area (e.g., city center or regular routes)
  2. Criminal’s home forms a base area for the criminal acts
  • Testing and outcome

    • Sample: 45 rapists
    • Outcomes: Circle hypothesis: 91% of crimes committed within circle (defined by two most distant crimes) with home as base within Circle.
    • Range hypothesis: max. distance to crime from home is strongly correlated with max. distance between crimes (r = .93).
    • This confirms Marauder model

Drug dealing study by Bernasco & Jacques (2015):

When dealing, drugs dealers:

  • Walk, don’t stand
  • Use stash spots to hide drugs
  • Interact a lot with police officers patrolling - how come? they don't want to stand out and be in less crowded places
  • Are aware of relevant, very small differences in physical features, social conditions, camera angle, time 

Kuo & Sullivan (2001). Aggression and violence in the inner city. Effects of environment via mental fatigue.:

Premises:

  • Life in inner city is taxing, especially for the less privileged:

    • Living in poor quality housing (small, noisy, unsafe)
    • Low income --> few resources
    • Crowded
  • This creates, among other things, mental fatigue
  • In the study, people were moved out to their homes to different locations. Some to a natural environment, some towards a more urban environment
  • Aggression toward partner less in Nature condition
  • Aggression toward child less in Nature condition
  • Attentional functioning (DSB):
    • worse in No Nature condition
    • related to aggression
    • mediator of Nature – Aggression relation
  • Mediation by attentional fatigue:

Natural vs non-natural environment --> attentional fatigue --> aggression

Keizer, K., Lindenberg, S., & Steg, L. (2008). The spreading of disorder:

"Broken windows theory”:Stating (1) that disorder is more likely when descriptive norm is in conflict with injunctive norm and (2) that disorder may spread to other forms of behavior: “cross-norm inhibition”

  • Experiment 1: Does graffiti increase littering? Yes, littering went from 33% to 69%
  • Experiment 3: Do unreturned shopping carts increase littering? Yes, from 30% to 58%
  • Experiment 6: Does littering increase theft? Yes, from 13% to 25%

If a norm is broken in a public place, other social norms are more easily broken also. The effect has long-term consequences also (see: Dur & Vollaard (2015). The Power of a Bad Example: A Field Experiment in Household Garbage Disposal)

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