º£½ÇÉçÇø

Skip to main content

Research areas

From the research prospective, the ARCADIA project is a multidisciplinary project connecting two º£½ÇÉçÇø faculties: the Faculty of Science with Department of Biology - Ecology Research Unit and the Faculty of Health Sciences with DRIVEN, the Danish Centre for Motivation and Behavior Science.

Department of Biology

The role of the º£½ÇÉçÇø’s Faculty of Science, Department of Biology, will be as scientific advisors to the Work Package 5 (WP5), led by the , for creating a vision of and strategy for nature-based transformation to resilience with the main goals of stimulating smarter, faster, systemic and detecting the Natural Based Solutions triggered transformation to resilience at local & regional level. The team will support the development of experimental co-innovation labs for building open co-innovation laboratories to design, test and foster adoption of the most promising approaches. Furthermore, the researchers will support in setting up the regional impact-to-scale strategy and plan by stimulating conditions for transformation across sectors & policies, also in cooperation with WP7.

Three primary investigators from the Department of Biology are: Associate Professor Gary Banta (Head of the Department of Biology), Associate Professor Sara Egemose, and Assistant Professor Paula Canal-Vergés.

 

DRIVEN - The Danish Centre for Motivation and Behaviour Science

The Danish Centre for Motivation and Behaviour Science (DRIVEN) at the Faculty of Health Sciences plays a crucial role in Work Package 7 (WP7), leading the task 7.2 participating in the design of theory-informed surveys and interviews to understand attitudes, values, and preferences for different potential nature-based solutions, such as vegetated drainage beds, artificial wetlands, coastal meadows, and rainwater ponds. These studies will target citizens and businesses in Funen.

The Faculty of Health Sciences  will co-develop guidance for the Funen region (and a template for other regions in ARCADIA), to help them achieve behavior change in a structured, systematic, and evidence-based manner. The guidance will help them develop new or modify existing behavior change interventions for nature-based solutions, targeting a range of individual, social, and policy factors.

From the Faculty of Health Sciences, Professor Nikos Ntoumanis and Professor Cecilie Thøgersen-Ntoumanis are participating in the project.

Department of Biology

Read more

DRIVEN - The Danish Centre for Motivation and Behaviour Science

Read more

Last Updated 02.10.2024