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Nature
makes us more Caring
Newswise — Want to be a better person?
Commune with nature.
Paying attention to the natural world not
only makes you feel better, it makes you
behave better, finds a new study to be
published October 1 in the Personality
and Social Psychology Bulletin.
“Stopping to experience our natural
surroundings can have social as well as
personal benefits,” says Richard Ryan,
coauthor and professor of psychology,
psychiatry and education at the University
of Rochester.
While the salubrious effects of nature are
well documented, from increasing happiness
and physical health to lowering stress, this
study shows that the benefits extend to a
person’s values and actions.
Exposure to natural as opposed to man-made
environments leads people to value community
and close relationships and to be more
generous with money, find Ryan and his team
of researchers at the University of
Rochester.
The paper includes four experiments in which
370 participants were exposed to either
natural or man-made settings.
Participants were encouraged to attend to
their environments by noticing colors and
textures and imagining sounds and smells.
In three of the studies, participants were
shown a selection of four images on a 19
inch computer screen for two minutes each.
Half of the subject viewed buildings, roads,
and other cityscapes; the other half
observed landscapes, lakes, and deserts.
The urban and nature images were matched for
color, complexity, layout, and lighting. In
a fourth study, participants were simply
assigned at random to work in a lab with or
without plants.
Participants then answered a questionnaire
assessing the importance of four life
aspirations: wealth and fame (“to be
financially successful” and “to be admired
by many people”) and connectedness and
community (“to have deep enduring
relationships” and “to work toward the
betterment of society”).
Across all four studies, people exposed to
natural elements rated close relationships
and community higher than they had
previously.
The questionnaire also measured how immersed
viewers were in their environments and found
that the more deeply engaged subjects were
with natural settings, the more they valued
community and closeness.
By contrast, the more intensely participants
focused on artificial elements, the higher
they rated wealth and fame.
To test generosity, two of the studies gave
participants a $5 prize with the
instructions that the money could be kept or
given to a second anonymous participant, who
would then be given an additional $5.
The second participant could choose to
return the prize money or keep it. Thus,
subjects had nothing to gain if they chose
to trust the other participant, and risked
losing their money.
The result? People who were in contact with
nature were more willing to open their
wallets and share.
As with aspirations, the higher the
immersion in nature, the more likely
subjects were to be generous with their
winnings.
Why should nature make us more charitable
and concerned about others? One answer, says
coauthor Andrew Przybylski, is that nature
helps to connect people to their authentic
selves.
For example, study participants who focused
on landscapes and plants reported a greater
sense of personal autonomy (“Right now, I
feel like I can be myself”).
For humans, says Przybylski, our authentic
selves are inherently communal because
humans evolved in hunter and gatherer
societies that depended on mutuality for
survival.
In addition, write the authors, the richness
and complexity of natural environments may
encourage introspection and the lack of
man-made structures provide a safe haven
from the man-made pressures of society.
“Nature in a way strips away the artifices
of society that alienate us from one
another,” says Przybylski.
Lead author Netta Weinstein says that the
findings highlight the importance of
creating green spaces in cities and have
implication for planners and architects.
Incorporating parks and other
representations of nature into urban
environments may help build a stronger sense
of community among residents, she explains.
By contrast, “to the extent that our links
with nature are disrupted, we may also lose
some connection with each other,” the
authors warn.
This alienation may help explain other
research showing that urban as compared to
rural dwellers show more reservation,
indifference, and estrangement from others.
On a personal level, Weinstein says the take
home message from the research is clear: “We
are influenced by our environment in ways
that we are not aware of,” she says.
Because of the hidden benefits of connecting
with nature, people should take advantage of
opportunities to get away from built
environments and, when inside, they should
surround themselves with plants, natural
objects, and images of the natural world.
“The more you appreciate nature, the more
you can benefit,” she says.
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