Title :
Healing effects of foliage plants using physiological and psychological characteristics
Author :
Sawada, Ayako ; Oyabu, Takashi
Author_Institution :
Japan Adv. Inst. of Sci. & Technol., JAIST, Nomi, Japan
Abstract :
Foliage plants serve as interior accessories and are placed in indoor spaces, such as offices, hotels, restaurants, and homes. Recently, their healing effects have attracted much attention. In this investigation, the healing effects of foliage plants on human subjects performing a computer task were examined by measuring salivary amylase activity, blood pressure, and pulse as physiological indices, and by using the profile of mood states (POMS, the Japanese edition) as a psychological index. The salivary amylase activities of the subjects working in a room with foliage plants were significantly decreased compared with those of the subjects working in a room without plants. When comparing average increase/decrease rate between cases immediately after and 30 min after task-loading, the rates of the salivary amylase activity, anger-hostility, vigor of the subjects in the cases with and without plants, are -11.1 and 3.5%, -3.4 and 0.3%, and 3.2 and -0.6%, respectively. It is evident that foliage plants have healing effects in workers.
Keywords :
blood pressure measurement; occupational health; physiology; psychology; vegetation; anger-hostility; blood pressure measurement; computer task; foliage plants; healing effects; indoor spaces; interior accessory; mood states profile; physiological characteristics; physiological indices measurement; psychological characteristics; psychological index; salivary amylase activity measurement; Blood pressure; Fatigue; Gaussian distribution; Histograms; Indexes; Loading; Psychology; foligage plants; healing effect; office environment; physiological and psychological responeses; salivary amylase;
Conference_Titel :
Computers and Industrial Engineering (CIE), 2010 40th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Awaji
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7295-6
DOI :
10.1109/ICCIE.2010.5668442