

Please take part in our online study and tell us about your sensory experiences when engaging with nature.
You are welcome to take part no matter your engagement with nature:




Link for more info and to take part: LinkedIn
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you might want to say a bit more about the study, its context and what the outcome is.Calling autistic adults (18 years+)
Please take part in our online study and tell us about your sensory experiences when engaging with nature.
You are welcome to take part no matter your engagement with nature:
If you don't at all
If you engage directly (e.g., visiting nature)
If you engage indirectly (e.g., watching nature videos)
The study has been designed with input from autistic community partners.
Link for more info and to take part: LinkedIn
That's okay, all experiences are welcome!I’m down with this
But I don’t go out much so I don’t know much about nature
Calling autistic adults (18 years+)
Please take part in our online study and tell us about your sensory experiences when engaging with nature.
You are welcome to take part no matter your engagement with nature:
If you don't at all
If you engage directly (e.g., visiting nature)
If you engage indirectly (e.g., watching nature videos)
The study has been designed with input from autistic community partners.
Link for more info and to take part: LinkedIn
Thank you for pointing this out - I have just added a reply to the original post about more of the context purpose and outcome of the study are/you might want to say a bit more about the study, its context and what the outcome is.
A lot of this info looks like it is in the first page of the study at durham uni - but even that it is in the context of a uni study is useful.
I've added a reply to the original post explaining the context, purpose and outcomes of the studyWhat's the purpose?
Thank you for sharing your experiences. We value all perspectives, whether positive or negative, but there's no pressure to participate.I don't think the information I can come up with would take more than five minutes. When I moved from a suburban edge to the country, I found it very boring. I appreciate it more now, but have never felt over stimulated even in storms, except by extremes of temperature, which is not really Aspie-specific. I'd be comfortable picking berries a hundred meters from a Bear eating berries.
There is no compensation w for taking part in this study but you can opt-in to be emailed the results of the study.What's the remuneration?
I have done the survey but missed the option to enter your email address to get a copy of the results.There is no compensation w for taking part in this study but you can opt-in to be emailed the results of the study.
Apart from wind I never experience sensory overload when in nature. Is this not the same for everyone on the spectrum? Do some of you have negative experiences when in natural spaces?
One of my first memories as a kid of maybe 3....falling out of a tree *lol* didnt put a dent in me or my infatuation with natureNature is always nice. The only negative experience I remember having in natural spaces is things like accidentally falling down from a tree.But that's still better than city life with no nature.
One of my first memories as a kid of maybe 3....falling out of a tree *lol* didnt put a dent in me or my infatuation with nature