#16: Your Brain, and Body, on Nature
Listen now
Description
Dr. Ming Kuo, Professor of Environmental Psychology and Director of the Landscape and Human Health Lab at University of Illinois joins the podcast to discuss the myriad psychological and physiological benefits that exposure to nature can provide, from decreased aggression, improved executive function and memory, and more. We discuss Dr. Kuo's attention restoration hypothesis and her research supporting decreases of crime in places with more green spaces, the inequitable distribution of trees and green spaces in urban environments, and much more. Among her many distinctions, Dr. Kuo is a panelist and contributing author for the Blue Ribbon Green Infrastructure Panel, a consultant to the City of Chicago on their Green Urban Design Initiative, and an expert panelist for the Robert Wood Johnson Active Living Research National Advisory Council. Background reading: You 2.0: Our Better Nature (NPR / Hidden Brain) Green spaces can reduce violent crime (Neuroscience News) How Decades of Racist Housing Policy Left Neighborhoods Sweltering (The New York Times) Coping with Poverty: Impacts of Environment and Attention in the Inner City (Dr. Ming Kuo) Ecopsychology: How Immersion in Nature Benefits Your Health (Yale University360)
More Episodes
Dr. Paul Mohai, a giant in the environmental justice field and professor at University of Michigan School for Environment and Sustainabilty, joins the podcast to discuss "what is environmental justice? and why is it important?" and issues related to the long fight for environmental justice across...
Published 09/16/20
Writer and editor at National Geographic Natasha Daly, whose investigative reporting focuses on animal welfare, conservation, and the exploitation of animals, joins the podcast. In this episode, Natasha and Jared discuss in-depth Natasha's 2019 cover story for National Geographic: Suffering...
Published 09/02/20
Chadwick Boseman, the actor, director and producer, most famous for playing King T'Challah in the 2018 film Black Panther, died tragically of colon cancer on Friday, August 28, 2020 at the age of 43. I knew Chad personally, and knew him to be a portrait of dignity, humility, grace, kindness, and...
Published 08/31/20