Hall, Troy
Hall, Troy
Position Type:
Faculty
Job Title:
Professor
Department:
Forest Ecosystems & Society
Office Location:
250 Peavy Forest Science Center (PFSC)
Phone Number:
(541) 737-1306
Email:
Education:
Ph.D., Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, 1996, Forest Resources
M.A., Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, 1990, Cultural Anthropology
B.A., Pomona College, Claremont, California, 1985, Anthropology
Research Areas:
- Sustainable Recreation and Tourism
- Social Science, Policy and Natural Resources
Research Interests:
- Environmental Communication
- Natural Resources
- Outdoor Recreation
Values and Attitudes Related to Natural Resource Management; Recreation Planning and Management (Wilderness and Protected Areas Focus); Environmental Communication; Public Understanding of Science; Interdisciplinary Research; Research Methods
Advising
Graduate Major Advisor
Graduate Students:
Selected Publications:
- Davidson, A., and Hall, T. E. (In press). Should wilderness be natural or wild? Bridger Wilderness visitors’ attitudes about management of disturbance. International Journal of Wilderness.
- Hall, T. E., and Amberg, S. M. (2013). Factors influencing consumption of farmed seafood products in the Pacific northwest. Appetite, 66, 1-9.
- Schnapp, L. M., Rotschy, L., Hall, T. E., Crowley, S. C., and O’Rourke, M. R. (2012). How to talk to strangers: Facilitating knowledge sharing within translational health teams with the Toolbox dialogue method. Translational Behavioral Medicine, 2(4), 469-479.
- Wilson, P. I., Hall, T. E., and Kruger, L. E. (2012). Riparian area protection and outdoor recreation: Lessons from the Northwest Forest Plan, Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research, (4)2, 131-141
- Hall, T. E., Wilson, P., and Newman, J. (2011). Evaluating the short- and long-term effects of a modified deliberative poll on Idahoans' attitudes and civic engagement related to energy options. Journal of Public Deliberation, 7(1), Article 6.
- Lewis, A., Hall, T. E., and Black, A. (2011). Career stages in wildland firefighting: Implications for voice in risky situations. International Journal of Wildland Fire 20, 115-124
- Amberg, S. M., and Hall, T. E. (2010). Precision and rhetoric in media reporting about contamination in farmed salmon. Science Communication, 32(4), 489-513
- Cole, D. N., and Hall, T. E. (2010). Experiencing the restorative components of wilderness environments: Does congestion interfere and does length of exposure matter? Environment & Behavior, 42(6), 806-823.
- Cole, David N.; Hall, Troy E. (2010). Privacy functions and wilderness recreation: Use density and length of stay effects on experience. Ecopsychology 2(2), 67-75.
- Hall, T. E., Ham, S. H., and Lackey, B. K. (2010). Comparative evaluation of the attention capture and holding power of novel signs aimed at park visitors. Journal of Interpretation Research, 15(1), 15-36
- Hall, T. E., Seekamp, E., and Cole, D. N. (2010). Do recreation motivations and wilderness involvement relate to support for wilderness management? A segmentation analysis. Leisure Sciences, 32(2), 109-124.
- Nielsen-Pincus, M., Hall, T., Force, J. E., and Wulfhorst, J. D. (2010). Sociodemographic effects on place bonding. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 30(4), 443-454.
- Seekamp, E., Harris, C., Hall, T. E., and Craig, T. Y. (2010). A mixed methods approach to measuring depth of group information processing in the context of deliberative public involvement. Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 4(3), 222-247
- Cole, D. N., & Hall, T. E. (2009). Perceived effects of setting attributes on visitor experiences in wilderness: Variation with situational context and visitor characteristics. Environmental Management, 44, 24-36.
- Hall, T. E. and Slothower, M. (2009). Cognitive factors affecting homeowners’ reactions to defensible space in the Oregon Coast Range. Society & Natural Resources, 22 (2), 95-110.
- Morse, W. C., Hall, T. E., and Kruger, L. (2008). Improving the integration of recreation with other resource values by applying concepts of scale from ecological theory. Environmental Management, 43, 369-380.
- Amberg, S. and Hall, T. E. (2008). Communicating risks and benefits of aquaculture: A content analysis of U.S. newsprint representations of farmed salmon. Journal of the World Aquaculture Society, 39(2), 143-157.
- Brown, R. N. K., Rosenberger, R. S., Kline, J. D., Hall, T. E., and Needham, M. D. (2008). Visitor preferences for managing wilderness recreation after wildfire. Journal of Forestry, Jan/Feb, 9-16.
- Hall, T. E. and White, D. D. (2008). Representing recovery: Science and local control in the framing of U.S. Pacific Northwest salmon policy. Human Ecology Review 15(1), 32-45.