Psychosocial Responses to Outdoor Artificial Light at Night: A Scoping Review
by Kévin Nadarajah·Updated 9d ago
42.9 KB1files
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Description
75 studies from seven databases were analyzed to map psychosocial responses to outdoor artificial light at night (ALAN). The dataset, created by Kévin Nadarajah and last updated in May 2026, synthesizes literature on perceptions, emotions, attitudes, and behaviors. Findings indicate the research is recent, concentrated in a few countries, and dominated by perceptual and emotional approaches.
Use Cases
Analyzing methodological trends in ALAN research based on the review of 75 studies.
Identifying gaps in cognitive and behavioral research on light pollution based on the described literature synthesis.
Informing policy design for nighttime lighting based on synthesized psychosocial determinants like norms and values.
Training models to categorize psychosocial dimensions (perceptual, emotional, cognitive) in environmental literature.
Strengths
Follows PRISMA-ScR guidelines for systematic scoping reviews, a structured methodology.
Analyzes 75 distinct studies from seven databases, providing a defined corpus.
Explicitly licensed under CC-BY-4.0 for open reuse.
Limitations
Row and column counts are unknown, limiting assessment of data granularity.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
The 42.9 KB file size suggests a very limited scope, likely containing summary data rather than raw study data.
Provenance
Source
Kévin Nadarajah via figshare
Collection Method
Scoping review following PRISMA-ScR guidelines, analyzing 75 studies from seven databases.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-05-29 04:50:42
Geography
Studies are noted to be concentrated in a few countries, but specific geography is not defined.
File format is XLSX, requiring software like Excel or a library to read.