关于大自然对人类益处的研究:各学科对 "大自然 "的引用和术语有多少重叠?

IF 4.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION People and Nature Pub Date : 2023-12-15 DOI:10.1002/pan3.10573
Kate Howlett, E. Turner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有关自然对人类的各种益处的研究具有学科广泛的特点,包括各种方法、手段和术语。虽然研究方法的多样性很有价值,但也可能导致难以整合和共享研究成果,并可能成为有效知识交流的障碍,阻碍研究成果的开发和应用。我们选择了四个广泛的研究领域(医学、心理学、教育学和环境学)作为此次范围界定综述的起点,这四个领域代表了研究自然对人类益处的不同方法,我们希望在这四个领域内部和之间探索引文和用于描述自然的术语的重叠之处。对于每篇论文,我们都记录了其发表期刊的学科(发表学科)、第一作者的学科(第一作者学科)、各学科期刊在其书目中被引用的次数(被引用学科)以及论文标题或摘要中用于描述所探讨的自然方面的术语(自然术语)。自然术语在出版学科和第一作者学科之间存在显著差异,在学科内部存在一定程度的一致性(例如,教育学论文一贯使用范围较窄的自然术语,如 "户外学习")。然而,心理学和公共卫生论文中使用的自然术语的范围明显较高,这表明这些学科的研究可能特别容易被搜索字符串忽略。引用的学科范围之广令人鼓舞,因为这表明不同的研究领域普遍了解彼此的工作。不过,为了避免不必要地扩大自然术语的范围并提高可搜索性,我们建议使用四个关键的自然术语:('户外学习'或'户外教育')、('自然'或'自然')、('绿色空间'或'绿地')和('生物多样性'或'树木'),这些术语可以跨学科使用。我们特别建议在每篇论文中至少包含其中一项,在综述检索字符串中应包含所有四项。这可能会使人们更好地理解不同学科对这一不断扩展的重要主题所做出的宝贵而不同的贡献。请在期刊博客上阅读本文的免费通俗语言摘要。
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Research on the benefits of nature to people: How much overlap is there in citations and terms for ‘nature’ across disciplines?
Research on the diverse benefits of nature to people is characterised by a broad range of disciplines involved, encompassing a variety of approaches, methods and terminologies. While a diversity of approaches is valuable, it can lead to difficulties in integrating and sharing findings, and could form a barrier to effective knowledge exchange, hindering the development and applications of research outputs. As a starting point for this scoping review, we chose four broad research areas (medicine, psychology, education and environment), selected to represent disparate approaches to research on the benefits of nature to people, within and across which to explore overlap in citations and terms used to describe nature. We conducted expert consultation and a snowball‐based approach to source publications, resulting in a sample of 210 papers spanning multiple disciplines within each of our four research areas. For each paper, we recorded the discipline of the journal in which it was published (publishing discipline), the discipline of its first author (first‐author discipline), the number of times journals of each discipline were cited in their bibliographies (cited discipline) and the term(s) used in the paper's title or abstract to describe the aspect of nature being explored (nature term). The cited disciplines were significantly different between publishing and first‐author disciplines, with papers from psychology, education and public health citing distinct communities of papers. However, disciplines generally cite a wide range of other disciplines, with articles in medical journals being particularly broadly cited. Nature terms were significantly different between publishing and first‐author disciplines, with some degree of consistency within disciplines (e.g. education papers consistently used a narrow range of nature terms, such as ‘outdoor learning’). However, there was a notably high range of nature terms used within psychology and public health papers, indicating that research from these disciplines may be particularly prone to being overlooked by search strings. The wide range of disciplines cited is encouraging, since this indicates that diverse research areas are generally aware of each other's work. However, to avoid unnecessary expansion of nature terms and support searchability, we propose four key terms for nature: (‘outdoor learning’ OR ‘outdoor education’), (‘nature’ OR ‘natural’), (‘green space’ OR ‘greenspace’) and (‘biodiversity’ or ‘trees’), which could be used across disciplines. We particularly propose that at least one of these be included in every paper, and all four should be included in review search strings. This is likely to result in a better understanding of the valuable, disparate contributions made by different disciplines to this expanding and important topic. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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来源期刊
People and Nature
People and Nature Multiple-
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
9.80%
发文量
103
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍:
期刊最新文献
What informs human–nature connection? An exploration of factors in the context of urban park visitors and wildlife Non‐material contributions of nature expressed by former tourists of Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania Favourite places for outdoor recreation: Weak correlations between perceived qualities and structural landscape characteristics in Swedish PPGIS study Where wilderness is found: Evidence from 70,000 trip reports Multidimensional mental representations of natural environment among Chinese preadolescents via draw‐and‐write mapping
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