4.7 Article

A tag is worth a thousand pictures: A framework for an empirically grounded typology of relational values through social media

Journal

ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
Volume 58, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoser.2022.101495

Keywords

Cultural ecosystem services; Relational values; Social media data analysis; Empirically grounded values typology; Landscape planning and management

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [I-1533-500.15/2021]
  2. Laboratory for the Analysis of Social-Ecological Systems in a Globalized world (LASEG), Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona and Generalitat de Catalunya [818002]
  3. AGAUR Catalan governmental agency [869324]
  4. German-Israeli Foundation (GIF grant) [730243]
  5. European Research Council [CEX2019-000940-M]
  6. H2020 -project NATURVATION
  7. Programme for Units of Excellence of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
  8. [2017-SGR-775]
  9. [2018FI_B00635]
  10. [PCIN-2016-002]

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Environmental values depend on social-ecological interactions and can influence the production of biophysical ecosystems. Understanding the nuanced nature of these values is crucial for environmental science and planning. This study explores the relational values ascribed to cultural ecosystem services (CES) through analyzing both visual and textual content in social media data. The results provide valuable information for landscape planning and highlight the need for spatial, temporal, and demographic analysis, as well as machine learning techniques.
Environmental values depend on social-ecological interactions and, in turn, influence the production of the underlying biophysical ecosystems. Understanding the nuanced nature of the values that humans ascribe to the environment is thus a key frontier for environmental science and planning. The development of many of these values depends on social-ecological interactions, such as outdoor recreation, landscape aesthetic appreciation or educational experiences with and within nature that can be articulated through the framework of cultural ecosystem services (CES). However, the non-material and intangible nature of CES has challenged previous at-tempts to assess the multiple and subjective values that people attach to them. In particular, this study focuses on assessing relational values ascribed to CES, here defined as values resonating with core principles of justice, reciprocity, care, and responsibility towards humans and more-than-humans. Building on emerging approaches for inferring relational CES values through social media (SM) images, this research explores the additional po-tential of a combined analysis of both the visual and textual content of SM data. To do so, we developed an inductive, empirically grounded coding protocol as well as a values typology that could be iteratively tested and verified by three different researchers to improve the consistency and replicability of the assessment. As a case study, we collected images and texts shared on the photo-sharing platform Flickr between 2004 and 2017 that were geotagged within the peri-urban park of Collserola, at the outskirts of Barcelona, Spain. Results reveal a wide spectrum of nine CES values within the park boundaries that show positive and negative correlations among each other, providing useful information for landscape planning and management. Moreover, the study high-lights the need for spatial, temporal and demographic analysis, as well as for supervised machine learning techniques to further leverage SM data into contextual and just decision-making and planning.

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