ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, Fifth Edition is the most authoritative and up-to-date textbook available in environmental
psychology. Environmental Psychology has become the leading text in its field by focusing on the application of
science and theory to the solution of problems involving natural and altered environments. The author team of Paul
Bell, Thomas Greene, Jeffrey Fisher, and Andrew Baum teach students to apply practical solutions to everyday environmental
problems. They integrate theory, research and application using their unifying, eclectic model to demonstrate human-environment
interaction and bring cohesion to the field. With an emphasis on the restorative effects of the natural environment,
the fifth edition contains expanded coverage of national parks and a new look at design of college campuses.
Table of Contents
1. The Why, What, and How of Environmental Psychology.
2. Nature and Human Nature.
3. Environmental Perception and Cognition.
4. Theories of Environment-Behavior Relationships.
5. Noise.
6. Weather, Climate, and Behavior.
7. Disasters, Toxic Hazards, and Pollution.
8. Personal Space and Territoriality.
9. High Density and Crowding Intimacy.
10. The City.
11. Planning and Design For Human Behavior.
12. Design in Residential and Institutional Environments.
13. Work, Learning, and Leisure Environments.
14. Changing Behavior to Save the Environment