id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-335109-czheponh Meidenbauer, Kimberly L. The Affective Benefits of Nature Exposure: What’s Nature Got to Do with It? 2020-09-18 .txt text/plain 9530 474 53 In one set of studies (Study 1 and 2), state affect before and after image viewing was examined as a function of both preference level (high, low, very high, or very low aesthetic value) and environment type (nature or urban). Despite work identifying preference as an influence in the emotional benefits of nature exposure (Mayer et al., 2009; Beute & de Kort, 2014; White et al., 2010; Browning et al., 2020) , many studies linking nature contact to psychological well-being do not assess preference for these environments, or examine how affect change relates to preference (Lee et al., 2009; Tsunetsugu et al., 2013; Valtchanov et al., 2010) . Additionally, to analyze the role of individual differences in preference for the images, a linear regression predicting change in affect by participants' average preference rating (ignoring condition) was conducted (Analysis 5). ./cache/cord-335109-czheponh.txt ./txt/cord-335109-czheponh.txt