Abstract

Green spaces in cities and urban parks serve as central areas for mental restoration and relieving pressure, and attention to soundscapes for their mental health benefits has become more prevalent. Birdsongs are perceived to enhance the restorative benefits of urban parks. This study examines Harbin Sun Island Park, the main bird habitat in the city of Harbin with numerous types of landscapes. We used space syntax to select the appropriate path space as a carrier and the pixel grid method to quantify path space shapes. A correlation analysis of field data was also used to explore the perceived restorative effects of birdsongs heard in urban parks using scales detailing the perceived restorative effects of various visual and auditory stimuli. The results show that soundscapes can significantly improve perceived recovery benefits, and that hearing birdsongs can significantly improve the perceived restorative benefits of wetland paths; the sky index of a tour path showed a significantly negative correlation with each feature (i.e., the four featured dimensions of “charm”, “escape”, “ductility” and “compatibility” included in the recovery scale), and the soft/hard ratio showed a significantly negative correlation with each studied feature. When the sky index ranged from 13–36%, tree coverage of the vertical coverage range was 30.28–38.6%, and when the soft/hard ratio ranged from 5–21, the perceived recovery benefit was strongest.

Highlights

  • Rapid urbanization has resulted in increased mental health problems among residents

  • This study involved a comparative analysis of the perceived restorative. Based past this involved comparative analysis ofofthe the perceived restorative benefits encountered in urban parks a a correlation analysisof quantitative space

  • Research, this study study involved aand comparative analysis perceivedpath restorative benefits of birdsongs encountered in urban parks and a correlation analysis of quantitative path morphological characteristics and their perceived restorative effects

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Summary

Introduction

Rapid urbanization has resulted in increased mental health problems among residents. Typical features of urban life such as excessive stimulation and information, tense and crowded spaces, and work and societal pressures are becoming more pronounced every day. A number of studies such as Kaplan’s attention restoration theory [1] and Ulrich’s stress recovery theory [2] have confirmed the health effects of green spaces on residents. Green spaces have many proven benefits on physiology and psychology, which in turn have a significantly positive impact on human health by relaxing the body and mind and preventing mental fatigue (Kaplan, 1995). Compared to what is experienced in urban environments, people more recover from stress and attention fatigue in green spaces [3]

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