Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Spending
time in Nature makes people feel more alive

Newswise, June 2010 — Feeling sluggish? The solution
may require getting outside the box – that
big brick-and-mortar box called a building.
Being outside in nature makes people feel
more alive, finds a series of studies
published in the June 2010 issue of the
Journal of Environmental Psychology.
And that sense of increased vitality exists
above and beyond the energizing effects of
physical activity and social interaction
that are often associated with our forays
into the natural world, the studies show.
“Nature is fuel for the soul, ” says Richard
Ryan, lead author and a professor of
psychology at the University of Rochester.
“Often when we feel depleted we reach for a
cup of coffee, but research suggests a
better way to get energized is to connect
with nature,” he says.
The findings, adds Ryan, are important for
both mental and physical health. “Research
has shown that people with a greater sense
of vitality don’t just have more energy for
things they want to do, they are also more
resilient to physical illnesses. One of the
pathways to health may be to spend more time
in natural settings,” says Ryan.
In recent years, numerous experimental
psychology studies have linked exposure to
nature with increased energy and heightened
sense of well-being.
For example, research has shown that people
on wilderness excursions report feeling more
alive and that just recalling outdoor
experiences increases feelings of happiness
and health.
Other studies suggest that the very presence
of nature helps to ward off feelings of
exhaustion and that 90 percent of people
report increased energy when placed in
outdoor activities.
What is novel about this research, write the
authors, is that it carefully tests whether
this increased vitality associated with the
outdoors is simply the feel-good spillover
from physical activity and people-mixing
often present in these situations.
To tease out the effects of nature alone,
the authors conducted five separate
experiments, involving 537 college students
in actual and imagined contexts. In one
experiment, participants were led on a
15-minute walk through indoor hallways or
along a tree-lined river path. In another,
the undergraduates viewed photographic
scenes of buildings or landscapes.
A third experiment required students to
imagine themselves in a variety of
situations both active and sedentary, inside
and out, and with and without others.
Two final experiments tracked participants’
moods and energy levels throughout the day
using diary entries. Over either four days
or two weeks, students recorded their
exercise, social interactions, time spent
outside, and exposure to natural
environments, including plants and windows.
Across all methodologies, individuals
consistently felt more energetic when they
spent time in natural settings or imagined
themselves in such situations. The findings
were particularly robust, notes Ryan; being
outside in nature for just 20 minutes in a
day was enough to significantly boost
vitality levels.
Interestingly, in the last study, the
presence of nature had an independent
energizing effect above that of being
outdoors. In other words, conclude the
authors, being outdoors was vitalizing in
large part because of the presence of
nature.
The paper builds on earlier research by
Ryan, Netta Weinstein, a psychologist at the
University of Hamburg, Germany, and others
showing that people are more caring and
generous when exposed to nature. “We have a
natural connection with living things,” says
Ryan. “Nature is something within which we
flourish, so having it be more a part of our
lives is critical, especially when we live
and work in built environments.” These
studies, concludes Ryan, underscore the
importance of having access to parks and
natural surroundings and of incorporating
natural elements into our buildings through
windows and indoor plants.
The paper was coauthored by Weinstein;
Jessey Bernstein, McGill University; Kirk
Warren Brown, Virginia Commonwealth
University; Louis Mastella, University of
Rochester; and Marylène Gagné, Concordia
University.
About the University of Rochester
The University of Rochester (www.rochester.edu)
is one of the nation’s leading private
universities. Located in Rochester, N.Y.,
the University gives students exceptional
opportunities for interdisciplinary study
and close collaboration with faculty through
its unique cluster-based curriculum. Its
College, School of Arts and Sciences, and
Hajim School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences are complemented by its Eastman
School of Music, Simon School of Business,
Warner School of Education, Laboratory for
Laser Energetics, Schools of Medicine and
Dentistry, and Nursing, and the Memorial Art
Gallery.
... ..
...
...