How do we quantify the person, the environment, and their interaction?

We use ecological measures to understand the external environment.

We use functional neuroimaging to understand the internal environment.

The Environmental Neuroscience Lab at the University of Chicago

is interested in how the physical environment affects the brain and behavior. Previous findings from the ENL show that brief interactions with natural environments (such as walks in a park) can improve memory and attention by 20%. Studies in our lab have examined how interacting with natural environments promotes these improvements, investigating brain networks that underlie the relationship between environment and behavior. We hope to further understand which features of the natural environment lead to improvements in memory and attention as well as identify other manipulations that increase brain efficiency. Our current research examines how physical and social characteristics of urban spaces –including social cohesion, physical disorder, heat, and greenspace– (1) affect interactions between individuals in different neighborhoods and (2) relate to crime. In pursuit of this question, we are using deep learning approaches to analyze large set of social networking, image, and video data from sources including Twitter, Reddit, Yelp, Google Street View, and Sage. With a better understanding and quantification of the relationships between the brain, behavior, and the environment, we hope our research will influence the design of physical spaces in ways that will optimize human mental health, physical health, and overall well-being.

NEWS

Save the trees, Md.

Save the trees, Md.

The lab's work was recently cited in a Baltimore Sun article by McKay Jenkins about the value of trees in the Chesapeake Bay area. Dr. Jenkins referenced the lab's 2015 paper on neighborhood greenspace and health in Toronto. To read Dr. Jenkins article click here, and...

A Scientific Explanation for “Broken Windows”

A Scientific Explanation for “Broken Windows”

Laura Bliss, a staff writer at The Atlantic's CityLab, recently wrote an article discussing our new JEP:General manuscript "The Order of Disorder: Deconstructing Visual Disorder and Its Effect on Rule-Breaking." Please click here for her article.

How our brains process disorder

How our brains process disorder

Kevin Lewis, a correspondent from The Boston Globe, wrote a summary of our publication in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General about visual disorder and rule-breaking (The Order of Disorder). Please click here for the article.