Feeling unhappy and cranky? The treatment: take a walk under some trees in the park.
That may not be the exact prescription of your doctor, but a first-of-its-kind study shows that visitors to urban parks use happier words and express less negativity on Twitter than they did before their visitâand that their elevated mood lasts, like a glow, for up to four hours afterwards.
The effect is so strongâa team of scientists from the 91°”ÍűÊÓÆ” discoveredâthat the increase in happiness from a visit to an outpost of urban nature is equivalent to the mood spike on Christmas, by far the happiest day each year on Twitter.
With more people living in cities, and growing rates of mood disorders, this research may have powerful implications for public health and urban planning.
The new study was , an open-access journal of the British Ecological Society.
Green matters
For three months, a team of scientists from the 91°”ÍűÊÓÆ” studied hundreds of tweets per day that people posted from 160 parks in San Francisco. âWe found that, yes, across all the tweets, people are happier in parks,â says Aaron Schwartz, a UVM graduate student who led the new research, âbut the effect was stronger in large regional parks with extensive tree cover and vegetation.â Smaller neighborhood parks showed a smaller spike in positive mood and mostly-paved civic plazas and squares showed the least mood elevation.
In other words, itâs not just getting out of work or being outside that brings a positive boost: the study shows that greener areas with more vegetation have the biggest impact. Itâs notable that one of the words that shows the biggest uptick in use in tweets from parks is âflowers.â
âIn cities, big green spaces are very important for peopleâs sense of well-being,â says Schwartz; meaning that efforts to protect and expand urban natural areas extend far beyond luxury and second-tier concernsââweâre seeing more and more evidence that itâs central to promoting mental health,â says Taylor Ricketts, a co-author on the new study and director of the Gund Institute for Environment at UVM.
In recent years, âa big focus in conservation has been on monetary benefitsâlike: how many dollars of flood damage did we avoid by restoring a wetland?â Ricketts says. âBut this study is part of a new wave of research that expands beyond monetary benefits to quantify the direct health benefits of nature. Whatâs even more innovative here is our focus on mental health benefits âwhich have been really underappreciated and understudied.â
Measuring happiness
The new study relied on the. This online instrumentâinvented by a team of scientists at UVM and The MITRE Corporation, including Chris Danforth and Peter Dodds, professors at and co-authors on the new studyâhas been gathering and analyzing billions of tweets for more than a decade, resulting in numerous scientific papers and extensive global media coverage. The instrument uses a body of about 10,000 common words that have been scored by a large pool of volunteers for what the scientists call their âpsychological valence,â a kind of measure of each wordâs emotional temperature.
The volunteers ranked words they perceived as the happiest near the top of a 1-9 scale; sad words near the bottom. Averaging the volunteersâ responses, each word received a score: âhappyâ itself ranked 8.30, âhahahaâ 7.94, and âparksâ 7.14. Truly neutral words, âandâ and âtheâ scored 5.22 and 4.98. At the bottom, âtrappedâ 3.08, âcrashâ 2.60, and âjailâ 1.76. âFlowersâ scored a pleasant 7.56.
Using these scores, the team collects some fifty million tweets from around the world each dayââthen we basically toss all the words into a huge bucket,â says Doddsâand calculate the bucketâs average happiness score.
Park position
To make the new study, the UVM team fished tweets out of this huge streamâfrom 4,688 users who publically identify their locationâthat were geotagged with latitude and longitude in the city of San Francisco. This allowed the team to know which tweets were coming from which parks. âThen, working with the U.S. Forest Service, we developed some new techniques for mapping vegetation of urban areasâat a very detailed resolution, about a thousand times more detailed than existing methods,â says Jarlath O'Neil-Dunne, director of UVMâs in the UVM Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources and a co-author on the new study. âThatâs what really enabled us to get an accurate understanding of how the greenness and vegetation of these urban areas relates to peopleâs sentiment there.â
âThis is the first study that uses Twitter to examine how user sentiment changes before, during, and after visits to different types of parks,â says Schwartz, a doctoral student in the Rubenstein School and Gund Institute graduate fellow supported by the National Science Foundation. âThe greener parks show a bigger boost.â
Overall, the tweets posted from these urban parks in San Francisco were happier by a dramatic 0.23 points on the hedonometer scale over the baseline. âThis increase in sentiment is equivalent to that of Christmas Day for Twitter as a whole in the same year,â the scientists write.
The cause of affect
âBeing in nature offers restorative benefits on dimensions not available for purchase in a store, or downloadable on a screen,â says UVMâs Chris Danforth, a professor of mathematics and fellow in the Gund Institute. He notes that a growing body of research shows an association between time in nature and improved mood, âbut the specific causal links are hard to nail down.â
The team of UVM scientists consider several possible mechanisms through which urban nature may improve mental health, including Green Mind Theory that suggests that the negativity bias of the brain, âwhich may have been evolutionarily advantageousâis constantly activated by the stressors of modern life,â the team writes.
âWhile we donât address causality in our study, we do find that negative languageâlike ânot,â âno,â âdonât,â âcanât,ââdecreased in the period immediately after visits to urban parks,â says Danforth, âoffering specific linguistic markers of the mood boost available outside.â Conversely, the study shows that the use of first-person pronounsââIâ and âmeââdrops off dramatically in parks, perhaps indicating âa shift from individual to collective mental frame,â the scientists write.
Of course, Twitter users are not a representative sample of all peopleâjust who are the âtwitter-afflictedâ (as Adam Gopnik wrote in a recent issue of the New Yorker) who pick up their phone to tweet from a park? Still, Twitter users are a broad demographic, earlier research shows, and this approach to near-real-time remote sensing via Twitter postsânot based on self-reportingâgives a new window for scientists onto the shifting moods of very large groups.
The nature of happiness has been pondered by philosophers for centuries and studied by psychologists for decades, but this new study suggests it might be as clear as that: in nature, people tend to be more happyâand thatâs a finding âthat may help public health officials and governments make plans and investments,â says UVMâs Aaron Schwartz.