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Nature images are more visually engaging than urban images: evidence from neural oscillations in the brain

Psychology

Nature images are more visually engaging than urban images: evidence from neural oscillations in the brain

A. S. Mcdonnell, S. B. Lotemplio, et al.

This research was conducted by Amy S. McDonnell, Sara B. LoTemplio, Emily E. Scott, and David L. Strayer. EEG recordings showed that viewing nature images produced lower parietal alpha power—indicating greater effortless visual engagement—while participants rated nature as more restorative, supporting Attention Restoration Theory’s notion of 'soft fascination' that helps effortful attention recover.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Introduction: Attention Restoration Theory (ART) proposes that urban environments place high demands on attention, leading to fatigue, whereas natural environments engage attention effortlessly, enabling recovery. The neural mechanisms underlying these differential attentional demands are not well understood. This study used electroencephalography (EEG) to examine attention-related brain activity while participants viewed images of nature versus urban environments. Methods: In a between-subjects design, 58 participants viewed 10 minutes of either nature or urban images during EEG recording. Frequency-domain measures were extracted to quantify parietal alpha power (visual engagement; 8–12 Hz at Pz) and frontal theta power (cognitive demand; 4–8 Hz at Cz). Results: Nature-image viewers showed significantly lower parietal alpha power than urban-image viewers (indicating greater visual engagement). Frontal theta power was numerically lower during nature viewing but not statistically significant, suggesting a trend toward lower cognitive demand. Participants rated nature images as more restorative on the Perceived Restorativeness Scale. Discussion: Findings indicate that natural scenes are visually engaging without imposing high cognitive demand, supporting ART’s proposition that nature involves ‘soft fascination’ and allows effortful attention to rest and recover.
Publisher
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Published On
Jun 17, 2025
Authors
Amy S. McDonnell, Sara B. LoTemplio, Emily E. Scott, David L. Strayer
Tags
Attention Restoration Theory
EEG
parietal alpha
frontal theta
natural environments
soft fascination
restorativeness
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