Perspectives on Wilderness: Re-Examining the Value of Extended Wilderness Experiences

Talbot, J. F., & Kaplan, S. (1986). Perspectives on wilderness: Re-examining the value of extended wilderness experiences. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 6, 3, 177-188.

Presents results from the final phase of a 10-yr research program dealing with the dynamics and the impacts of wilderness experiences. Although these data are from 49 participants in shorter trips than those reported on previously, questionnaire data indicate that responses to the different trips were similar and that responses from participants of different ages and sexes were also similar. Theoretical issues that emerged from earlier analyses of participants' journals are also re-examined in light of the current data. Earlier results suggested that an individual's growing perceptual understanding of the surrounding wilderness environment was connected to a wide range of personal insights as well as other psychological benefits. Results from the current data concur with this finding. Feelings of control over the environment were not evident either in the original data or in the current participants' journals. (20 ref)

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