This textbook provides a clear and comprehensive introduction to the rapidly expanding field of environmental psychology. The authors start with a review of the history of environmental psychology, highlighting its interdisciplinary nature. They trace its roots in architecture, ecology and geography, and examine the continuing relationship of these subjects to the psychological tradition. The book then moves through key contemporary lines of research in the field, contrasting models from perception and cognition, such as those of Gibson and Brunswick, with major social psychological approaches as represented by Lewin, Barker and others. The book concludes with an analysis of the most promising areas of research and practice

Environmental Psychology and Psychological Tradition

Environmental psychology and psychological tradition

The Spatio-Physical Environment in the Psychological Tradition and the ‘Ecological Demand’

The increasing calls in the 1960s and 1970s for psychology to take a specific interest in the spatio-physical environment have to be considered against ...

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