Architectural Neuroimmunology: A Pilot Study Examining the Impact of Biophilic Architectural Design on Neuroinflammation
May 3rd, 2024
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Cleo Valentine, Tony Steffert, Heather Mitcheltree, Koen Steemers
Biophilic design principles incorporate natural elements, such as plants and water features, into architectural design. This paper analyzes a pilot study that investigated the relationship between biophilic design and neuroinflammation, mediated by physiological stress responses. Their findings suggest that visual exposure to biophilic design may have a positive impact on physiological stress.
Buildings
DOI: 10.3390/buildings14051292
Posted byMahmoud Said
Pending staff verification
Notify
Abstract/Description
Recent research in architectural neuroscience has found that visual exposure to biophilic design may help reduce occupant physiological stress responses. However, there are still significant gaps in our understanding of the complex ways in which biophilic design impacts on building occupant neurophysiology. The relationship between visual exposure to biophilic design and neurophysiological responses such as neuroinflammation have yet to be directly investigated. This paper examines the results of a pilot study that was established to investigate the relationship between visual exposure to biophilic design and neuroinflammation, as mediated by physiological stress responses. The pilot study utilised a 32-channel quantitative electroencephalograph (qEEG) to assess the relative changes in neuroinflammatory markers (relative alpha and relative delta power band activity) of 10 participants while they were exposed to 2D digital images of buildings that visually expressed varying degrees of biophilic design. Participants exhibited a decrease in relative delta power when exposed to higher levels of biophilic design. No statistically significant changes in relative alpha power were observed. These findings suggest that exposure to buildings with higher degrees of biophilia may result in decreased neuroinflammatory activity. In doing so, this research works to further develop our understanding of the complex ways in which the built environment impacts on occupant neuroinflammation and physiological stress.
