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Yasushi SUKO is a doctoral student at the Faculty of Social Sciences/Psychology, Tampere University, Finland. He studies the effects of nature experience on people, especially the restorative effect of repeatedly listening to natural sounds (e.g., birdsong, the sound of a running river, etc.). He is currently a member of the EnviWell Research Group, directed by Professor Kalevi Korpela.
In this episode we deep-dive into the acoustic stimuli and elaborate on the various potentials listening to specific sounds can have for health promotion, restoration and wellbeing. The roles of nature sounds are discussed and practical applications both for clinical and non-clinical contexts are investigated.
Time Stamps and Related References/Projects:
PART II:
04:40 Y. Suko’s interest in natural sounds originates from J.S. Bach’s (1685-1750) music and Ivan Shishkin’s (1832-1898) forest landscape paintings.
06:10 Y. Suko’s research on alleviating surgeons’ stress through listening to natural sounds.
11:28 Literature on which Y. Suko based the audio files for his studies.
13:20 Three theories explaining why natural sounds are restorative: attention restoration theory (ART), stress recovery theory (SRT), and conditioned restoration theory (CRT).
21:20 PART II
22:35 Y. Suko’s research on the effects of faint traffic noise mixed with birdsong.
33:20 Future applications of restorative natural sounds in clinical and non-clinical settings.
38:50 Restorative natural sounds are related to salutogenesis.
40:00 Application of restorative natural sounds in public spaces.
46:45 Ideas for playing restorative natural sounds in prisons and psychiatric wards.
56:40 The effects of subjective sound source attributions (or biases) on the restorative properties of natural sounds as such.
67:35 Y. Suko’s ideas on how this research field will develop in the future: Long-term restorative effects of natural sounds.
71:00 Y. Suko introduces his supervisor and the research group to which he belongs.
EnviWell Research Group members’ articles (excerpts):
72:50 The most important take-home messages.
Yasushi SUKO is a doctoral student at the Faculty of Social Sciences/Psychology, Tampere University, Finland. He studies the effects of nature experience on people, especially the restorative effect of repeatedly listening to natural sounds (e.g., birdsong, the sound of a running river, etc.). He is currently a member of the EnviWell Research Group, directed by Professor Kalevi Korpela.
In this episode we deep-dive into the acoustic stimuli and elaborate on the various potentials listening to specific sounds can have for health promotion, restoration and wellbeing. The roles of nature sounds are discussed and practical applications both for clinical and non-clinical contexts are investigated.
Time Stamps and Related References/Projects:
PART II:
04:40 Y. Suko’s interest in natural sounds originates from J.S. Bach’s (1685-1750) music and Ivan Shishkin’s (1832-1898) forest landscape paintings.
06:10 Y. Suko’s research on alleviating surgeons’ stress through listening to natural sounds.
11:28 Literature on which Y. Suko based the audio files for his studies.
13:20 Three theories explaining why natural sounds are restorative: attention restoration theory (ART), stress recovery theory (SRT), and conditioned restoration theory (CRT).
21:20 PART II
22:35 Y. Suko’s research on the effects of faint traffic noise mixed with birdsong.
33:20 Future applications of restorative natural sounds in clinical and non-clinical settings.
38:50 Restorative natural sounds are related to salutogenesis.
40:00 Application of restorative natural sounds in public spaces.
46:45 Ideas for playing restorative natural sounds in prisons and psychiatric wards.
56:40 The effects of subjective sound source attributions (or biases) on the restorative properties of natural sounds as such.
67:35 Y. Suko’s ideas on how this research field will develop in the future: Long-term restorative effects of natural sounds.
71:00 Y. Suko introduces his supervisor and the research group to which he belongs.
EnviWell Research Group members’ articles (excerpts):
72:50 The most important take-home messages.