Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Cognitive Science

Neuroimaging study provides new details on the link between stress reduction and green urban landscapes

by Eric W. Dolan
November 29, 2020
in Cognitive Science, Mental Health
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Follow PsyPost on Google News

Viewing green space in urban landscapes elicits substantial activity in key areas of the brain related to attention and stress regulation, according to new research published in the journal NeuroImage. The findings shed new light on the relationship between green urban landscapes and mental health.

“In the past decade, there has been a lot of research across varying disciplines that has converged to indicate that nature-containing environments such as those carrying an abundance of trees or foliage can enhance mental well-being,” said study authors Tatia Lee, Chris Webster, Dorita Chang, and Bin Jiang of The University of Hong Kong in a joint statement to PsyPost.

“For example, individuals exposed to green environments report lower levels of stress than those in less-green settings. In this work, we were interested in asking just how green environments engage the human brain, and how stress-regulatory benefits come about from exposure to these environments. It is one thing to show that all these environments are good for us — but it is just as important to understand why!”

For their study, the researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine the brain activity of 44 participants as they viewed images of neighborhood streets that varied in green-space density. Within two-weeks of their brain scan, the participants returned to the laboratory to provide self-reported stress and preference ratings of the images.

The team of scientists observed systematic differences in brain responses based on the green-space density of the urban images, and these differences were correlated to stress and preference ratings.

“It turns out environments (in our case, urban landscapes) with varying degrees of green-cover, activate a primitive part of the brain – the posterior cingulate. This region is particularly intriguing as it is a part of a larger (limbic) system that is known for its role in serving motivation- and emotion-related responses, but also has extensive connections to executive (e.g., decision-making) and attentional nodes in the brain,” the researchers explained.

“When we varied the green-content contained in our scenes, we saw corresponding changes in the activity of this same region that was surprisingly well-matched to the subjects’ own reported stress-ratings after viewing these same images. It appears then, that the cingulate is a key area that serves our (human) sensitivity to green-spaces, and acts as an early driver that ultimately interfaces with stress regulatory responses in the neuroendocrine system.”

MRI brain scan with highlighting indicating location of the posterior cingulate cortex. (Photo credit: Geoff B Hall)

The new findings and similar research indicate that “green space exposure is physiologically important to your health,” the authors of the study added.

“We know this from statistical studies of population health. Now we know more about it via brain activity analysis. Be sure to take a regular dose of greenery as well as of walking. Walk the greener route, even if it’s longer, or particularly if it’s longer! Consider paying that bit extra on rent for the greener outlook.”

The State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at the University of Hong Kong collaborated with the university’s Faculty of Architecture to conduct the current study.

“All professions need to establish evidence-based justifications for their interventions. Only relatively recently have data sources been big enough and accurate enough to start to discover the efficacy of urban green spaces in moderating stress, reducing obesity and so on. Understanding these relationships measured within population-health studies is one thing. Understanding why and how they work physiologically and psychologically is a step further,” the researchers told PsyPost.

“Such knowledge will help not only in designing more beneficial and therapeutic green-infrastructure systems for healthy cities of the future, but also feeds into the Faculty of Architecture’s research on VR-AR-IM technologies for providing green-therapy for people without access to outdoor green experience (severely disabled, hospitals, factories, prisons).”

“Planning our environment to promote mental well-being is of utmost importance because of the increasing prevalence of stress-induced mood problems associated with urban living.”

But the new research includes some caveats.

“We started simple here, by altering the density of green-cover and checking how this affects the brain. But one of the key things that we can draw from past research is that natural scenes vary in other characteristics as well — for example, in their characteristic ‘second order’ structure defined by edges and lines,” the researchers explained.

“One good question moving forward is whether beyond greenness, deviations of such properties may also lead to variances in stress-responses. It is easy to imagine how such work would have important implications for city/architectural-planning.”

Future research could examine what particular features of natural environments are associated with mental health benefits.

“We suspect that there is a relationship between the structure of green spaces and brain/mood/health responses, just as there may be in music. ‘Mozart effect’ experiments initially proposed that the complexity of Mozart was the reason for (temporarily) enhanced cognitive effects in young adults in solving spatial puzzles. The result has recently been generalized to ‘whatever music you have a preference for,'” the researchers said.

“The current understanding is that music stimulates the brain for clearer 3D and other complex forms of problem solving. So: is it the structure of the green (shapes of trees, variegation of texture and shade) or the prior-preference that induce the cognitive (and stress-moderating) effects?”

The study, “The human posterior cingulate and the stress-response benefits of viewing green urban landscapes“, was authored by Dorita H.F. Chang, Bin Jiang, Nicole H. L. Wong, Jing Jun Wong, Chris Webster, and Tatia M.C. Lee.

(Image by Stephen Dumas from Pixabay)

TweetSendScanShareSendPin9ShareShareShareShareShare

RELATED

First human study sheds light on the cognitive and physiological effects of 3-MMC
ADHD

People with ADHD exhibit altered brain activity before making high-stakes choices

July 14, 2025

New research reveals that the brains of adults with ADHD function differently when anticipating risky decisions. They show reduced activation in key areas for self-awareness and emotional integration, offering a neurological basis for challenges with impulsivity and decision-making.

Read moreDetails
New research shows the psychological toll of the 2024 presidential election
Anxiety

New research shows the psychological toll of the 2024 presidential election

July 13, 2025

Among young adults, stress from election news was linked to higher risks of depression and anxiety, while pre-election anticipatory stress was linked to depression only. Stress about the election outcome was not associated with either condition.

Read moreDetails
Pills spilling out of a bottle on a table
ADHD

Methylphenidate: ADHD drug curbs impulsivity in men only, linked to brain wiring differences

July 13, 2025

Researchers found that methylphenidate lowers impulsive choice behavior in men but not women. The effect was associated with the structural integrity of specific white matter tracts in the brain, highlighting potential sex-based differences in drug response.

Read moreDetails
Researchers identify 45 distinct brain connectivity alterations linked to anorexia nervosa
MDMA

Brain scans reveal who may benefit most from MDMA for trauma-related symptoms

July 13, 2025

MDMA-assisted therapy shows promise for trauma, but its effects vary. Now, a study in JAMA Network Open offers a solution: brain scans that measure reactivity to unconscious threat cues can identify individuals most likely to respond positively to the treatment.

Read moreDetails
Frequent egg consumption linked to lower risk of Alzheimer’s dementia, study finds
Alzheimer's Disease

Frequent egg consumption linked to lower risk of Alzheimer’s dementia, study finds

July 12, 2025

Older adults who ate more than one egg per week had a lower risk of developing Alzheimer’s dementia and showed fewer Alzheimer’s-related brain changes. About 39% of this association was explained by higher dietary choline intake from eggs.

Read moreDetails
Liberals and conservatives live differently — but people think the divide is even bigger than it is
Depression

Low sexual activity, body shape, and mood may combine in ways that shorten lives, new study suggests

July 12, 2025

A large American survey finds that adults who have sex fewer than a dozen times a year die sooner when extra abdominal fat coincides with depression, hinting that mood and body shape can combine in a dangerous feedback loop.

Read moreDetails
Liberals and conservatives live differently — but people think the divide is even bigger than it is
Anxiety

Highly irritable teens are more likely to bully others, but anxiety mitigates this tendency

July 12, 2025

Social anxiety weakens the link between irritability and bullying in adolescents—irritable teens are less likely to bully others if they also have social anxiety. This moderating effect was not seen with generalized anxiety or other forms of aggression.

Read moreDetails
A surprising body part might provide key insights into schizophrenia risk
Addiction

Neuroscientists shed new light on how heroin disrupts prefrontal brain function

July 11, 2025

After heroin exposure and abstinence, mice showed reduced prefrontal brain activity during social interaction but heightened responses to drug-related cues, suggesting heroin disrupts normal brain function in ways that may contribute to social withdrawal and relapse risk.

Read moreDetails

SUBSCRIBE

Go Ad-Free! Click here to subscribe to PsyPost and support independent science journalism!

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

People with ADHD exhibit altered brain activity before making high-stakes choices

Narcissistic individuals are more prone to maladaptive daydreaming

Effort or fate? Sexual mindsets predict whether bedroom bliss spills over into broader wellbeing

People who use AI may pay a social price, according to new psychology research

Researchers identify a shared brain pattern behind feeling surprised

New research shows the psychological toll of the 2024 presidential election

Methylphenidate: ADHD drug curbs impulsivity in men only, linked to brain wiring differences

Daughters who feel more attractive report stronger, more protective bonds with their fathers

         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy