The Changing Morphology of Indoor Ecosystems in the Twenty-first Century Driven by Technological, Climatic, and Sociodemographic Forces
Abstract
The majority of humans reside in urban regions and spend most of their time in
indoor environments such as residential, educational, occupational, transportation,
and health-care facilities. Interior settings affect occupants’ health and behavior
through their design, and chemical, microbial, and social features. The initial
portion of this paper describes ecological psychologists’ conceptions of indoor
environments as self-contained and distinctly bounded ecobehavioral systems,
with evidence for the behavioral and health effects of homes, workplaces, and other
kinds of indoor ecosystems cited. The ensuing sections examine contemporary
changes in the structure and functioning of indoor ecosystems propelled by the
digitalization of society, global climate change, and sociodemographic shifts toward
population aging, income inequality, and anti-immigrant views in many countries.
Transdisciplinary action research is needed to understand and manage rapid changes
in indoor ecosystems, as evidenced by the increasing permeability of their spatial
and temporal boundaries, modifications of their structural features, and shifts in
the distribution of certain categories of settings within host communities. Effective
collaboration among academic and nonacademic partners spanning diverse fields
and multiple environmental scales is likewise essential for developing broad-gauged
solutions to enhance the healthfulness and sustainability of indoor ecosystems as
they continue to evolve in future years.
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Source
Human Ecology Review
Type
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Access Statement
Open Access via publisher website
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Creative Commons licence (CC BY-NC-ND; creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)