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IRIS
Time spent in nature benefits human mental and physical well-being. However, much of the variance in outcomes of nature contact remains unexplained, suggesting that new mechanistic pathways need to be considered. Here, we tested a novel conceptual model linking nature contact with life satisfaction via pathways involving positive experiences of living in and experiencing the world through the physical self. Using data from the Body Image in Nature Survey (BINS; N = 50,363), representing respondents from 58 nations and speaking 36 different languages, we find that nature contact is associated with greater self-compassion and greater perceived restoration in nature, which in turn are associated with more positive body image. In addition, more positive body image is associated with greater life satisfaction. These associations were robust to sensitivity tests, generalised to all gender identities and age groups, and held individually in almost all national groups and languages. Although replications are needed, we propose that the materialities of natural environments help to link bodily experiences to the production and experience of well-being, a process that is largely stable across national groups.
Positive body image is a pathway between nature contact and life satisfaction across 58 nations
Swami, Viren;Voracek, Martin;Stieger, Stefan;Aavik, Toivo;Ranjbar, Hamed Abdollahpour;Adebayo, Sulaiman Olanrewaju;Afhami, Reza;Ahmed, Oli;Aimé, Annie;Akel, Marwan;Halbusi, Hussam Al;Alexias, George;Ali, Khawla F.;AlpDal, Nursel;Alsalhani, Anas B.;ÁlvarezSolas, Sara;Soares Amaral, Ana Carolina;Andrianto, Sonny;Aspden, Trefor;Argyrides, Marios;Benzon R. Aruta, John Jamir;Atkin, Stephen;Ayandele, Olusola;Baceviciene, Migle;Bahbouh, Radvan;Ballesio, Andrea;Barron, David;Bellard, Ashleigh;Bender, Sóley Sesselja;Beydaǧ, Kerime Derya;Birovljević, Gorana;Blackburn, MarieÈve;BorjaAlvarez, Teresita;Borowiec, Joanna;Bozogáňová, Miroslava;BratlandSanda, Solfrid;Browning, Matthew H. E. M.;BrytekMatera, Anna;Burakova, Marina;ÇakırKoçak, Yeliz;Camacho, Pablo;Camilleri, Vittorio Emanuele;Cazzato, Valentina;Cerea, Silvia;Chaiwutikornwanich, Apitchaya;Chaleeraktrakoon, Trawin;Chambers, Tim;Chen, QingWei;Chen, Xin;Chien, ChinLung;Chobthamkit, Phatthanakit;Choompunuch, Bovornpot;Compte, Emilio J.;Corrigan, Jennifer;Cosmas, Getrude;Cowden, Richard G.;CzepczorBernat, Kamila;Czub, Marcin;da Silva, Wanderson Roberto;Dadfar, Mahboubeh;Dalley, Simon E.;Dany, Lionel;Datu, Jesus Alfonso D.;Berbert de Carvalho, Pedro Henrique;de Holanda Coelho, Gabriel Lins;De Jesus, Avila Odia S.;Debbabi, Sonia Harzallah;Dhakal, Sandesh;Bernardo, Francesca Di;Dimitrova, Donka D.;Dion, Jacinthe;Dixson, Barnaby;Donofrio, Stacey M.;Drysch, Marius;Du, Hongfei;Dzhambov, Angel M.;ElJor, Claire;Enea, Violeta;Eskin, Mehmet;Farbod, Farinaz;Farrugia, Lorleen;Fian, Leonie;Fisher, Maryanne L.;Folwarczny, Michał;Frederick, David A.;FullerTyszkiewicz, Matthew;Furnham, Adrian;García, Antonio Alías;Geller, Shulamit;Ghisi, Marta;Ghorbani, Alireza;Gomez Martinez, Maria Angeles;Gradidge, Sarah;Graf, Sylvie;Grano, Caterina;Gyene, Gyöngyvér;Hallit, Souheil;Hamdan, Motasem;Handelzalts, Jonathan E.;Hanel, Paul H. P.;Hawks, Steven R.;Hekmati, Issa;Helmy, Mai;Hill, Tetiana;Hina, Farah;Holenweger, Geraldine;Hřebíčková, Martina;Ijabadeniyi, Olasupo Augustine;Imam, Asma;İnce, Başak;Irrazabal, Natalia;Jankauskiene, Rasa;Jiang, DingYu;JiménezBorja, Micaela;JiménezBorja, Verónica;Johnson, Evan M.;Jovanović, Veljko;Jović, Marija;Jović, Marko;Pereira Junqueira, Alessandra Costa;Kahle, LisaMarie;Kantanista, Adam;Karakiraz, Ahmet;Karkin, Ayşe Nur;Kasten, Erich;Khatib, Salam;Khieowan, Nuannut;Kimong, Patricia Joseph;Kiropoulos, Litza;Knittel, Joshua;Kohli, Neena;Koprivnik, Mirjam;Kospakov, Aituar;KrólZielińska, Magdalena;Krug, Isabel;Kuan, Garry;Kueh, Yee Cheng;Kujan, Omar;Kukić, Miljana;Kumar, Sanjay;Kumar, Vipul;Lamba, Nishtha;Lauri, Mary Anne;Laus, Maria Fernanda;LeBlanc, Liza April;Lee, Hyejoo J.;Lipowska, Małgorzata;Lipowski, Mariusz;Lombardo, Caterina;Lukács, Andrea;Maïano, Christophe;Malik, Sadia;Manjary, Mandar;Baldó, Lidia Márquez;MartinezBanfi, Martha;Massar, Karlijn;Matera, Camilla;McAnirlin, Olivia;Mebarak, Moisés;Mechri, Anwar;Filgueiras Meireles, Juliana Fernandes;Mesko, Norbert;Mills, Jacqueline;Miyairi, Maya;Modi, Ritu;Modrzejewska, Adriana;Modrzejewska, Justyna;Mulgrew, Kate E.;Myers, Taryn A.;Namatame, Hikari;Nassani, Mohammad Zakaria;Nerini, Amanda;Neto, Félix;Neto, Joana;Neves, Angela Noguiera;Ng, SiuKuen;Nithiya, Devi;O, Jiaqing;Obeid, Sahar;OdaMontecinos, Camila;Olapegba, Peter Olamakinde;Olonisakin, Tosin Tunrayo;Omar, Salma Samir;Örlygsdóttir, Brynja;Özsoy, Emrah;Otterbring, Tobias;Pahl, Sabine;Panasiti, Maria Serena;Park, Yonguk;Patwary, Muhammad Mainuddin;Pethö, Tatiana;Petrova, Nadezhda;Pietschnig, Jakob;Pourmahmoud, Sadaf;Prabhu, Vishnunarayan Girishan;Poštuvan, Vita;Prokop, Pavol;Ramseyer Winter, Virginia L.;Razmus, Magdalena;Ru, Taotao;Rupar, Mirjana;Sahlan, Reza N.;Hassan, Mohammad Salah;Šalov, Anđela;Sapkota, Saphal;Sarfo, Jacob Owusu;Sawamiya, Yoko;Schaefer, Katrin;SchulteMecklenbeck, Michael;Seekis, Veya;Selvi, Kerim;Sharifi, Mehdi;Shrivastava, Anita;Siddique, Rumana Ferdousi;Sigurdsson, Valdimar;Silkane, Vineta;Šimunić, Ana;Singh, Govind;Slezáčková, Alena;SundgotBorgen, Christine;Hoor, Gill Ten;Tevichapong, Passagorn;Tipandjan, Arun;Todd, Jennifer;Togas, Constantinos;Tonini, Fernando;TovarCastro, Juan Camilo;Jepsen Trangsrud, Lise Katrine;Tripathi, Pankaj;Tudorel, Otilia;Tylka, Tracy L.;Uyzbayeva, Anar;Vally, Zahir;Vanags, Edmunds;Vega, Luis Diego;VicenteArruebarrena, Aitor;VidalMollón, Jose;Vilar, Roosevelt;Villegas, Hyxia;Vintilă, Mona;Wallner, Christoph;White, Mathew P.;Whitebridge, Simon;Windhager, Sonja;Wong, Kah Yan;Yau, Eric Kenson;Yamamiya, Yuko;Lan Yeung, Victoria Wai;Zanetti, Marcelo Callegari;Zawisza, Magdalena;Zeeni, Nadine;Zvaríková, Martina;Tran, Ulrich S.
2026-01-01
Abstract
Time spent in nature benefits human mental and physical well-being. However, much of the variance in outcomes of nature contact remains unexplained, suggesting that new mechanistic pathways need to be considered. Here, we tested a novel conceptual model linking nature contact with life satisfaction via pathways involving positive experiences of living in and experiencing the world through the physical self. Using data from the Body Image in Nature Survey (BINS; N = 50,363), representing respondents from 58 nations and speaking 36 different languages, we find that nature contact is associated with greater self-compassion and greater perceived restoration in nature, which in turn are associated with more positive body image. In addition, more positive body image is associated with greater life satisfaction. These associations were robust to sensitivity tests, generalised to all gender identities and age groups, and held individually in almost all national groups and languages. Although replications are needed, we propose that the materialities of natural environments help to link bodily experiences to the production and experience of well-being, a process that is largely stable across national groups.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11570/3354209
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simulazione ASN
Il report seguente simula gli indicatori relativi alla propria produzione scientifica in relazione alle soglie ASN 2023-2025 del proprio SC/SSD. Si ricorda che il superamento dei valori soglia (almeno 2 su 3) è requisito necessario ma non sufficiente al conseguimento dell'abilitazione. La simulazione si basa sui dati IRIS e sugli indicatori bibliometrici alla data indicata e non tiene conto di eventuali periodi di congedo obbligatorio, che in sede di domanda ASN danno diritto a incrementi percentuali dei valori. La simulazione può differire dall'esito di un’eventuale domanda ASN sia per errori di catalogazione e/o dati mancanti in IRIS, sia per la variabilità dei dati bibliometrici nel tempo. Si consideri che Anvur calcola i valori degli indicatori all'ultima data utile per la presentazione delle domande.
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