Hidden Brain - How Nature Heals Us
Episode Date: November 3, 2025We've known intuitively for centuries that spending time in nature can give us a boost. But it’s only recently that scientists have begun to identify exactly what it is about the outdoors that has s...uch a powerful effect on our mood and our minds. This week, psychologist Marc Berman explores how spending time in nature can actually undo some of the harmful effects of our modern lives.Do you have follow-up questions, comments, or stories about nature's effect on the mind after listening to this episode? If you'd be comfortable sharing your thoughts with the Hidden Brain audience, please record a voice memo on your phone and email it to us at ideas@hiddenbrain.org. Use the subject line nature. Thanks! Illustration by Swati B on Unsplash+ Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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today's show. This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedant. When we are facing struggles with
our thoughts or our emotions, many of us turn first to medication or therapy as solutions.
The share of American adults reporting they took prescription drugs for mental health
condition stood at 19% in 2022.
That's according to an analysis of government data by the Kaiser Family Foundation.
That's millions of people taking drugs for anxiety, for depression, for attention deficit disorder.
Millions more are in therapy, working through their challenges with a counselor.
For many people, such measures are enormously helpful, even a
essential. At the same time, it may be the case that we are overlooking a potential
source of relief that is literally right outside our door. This remedy costs
nothing, has no known side effects, and is often delightfully pleasant. We are
talking about spending time in nature. The capacity of the natural world to
soothe and refresh our sensibilities has been known for centuries. But it's only recently
that scientists have begun to identify exactly what it is about the outdoors that has such a
powerful effect on our moods and our minds. Nature is filled with curved edges. And one thing that
we found in our research is that people really like images that have more curved edges,
even built images. So images of architectural scenes that don't have any nature in them,
If the architecture has more curved edges, people tend to like that architecture more.
If you struggle with the ability to think clearly, to focus your attention, to control maladaptive behaviors,
this episode and a companion story on Hidden Brain Plus are definitely for you.
Why Nature is Good Medicine.
This week on Hidden Brain.
brain.
Many of us enjoy an occasional stroll in the park or a hike in the woods.
It feels good to see beautiful trees, to hear birds sing, and to breathe fresh air.
But might nature offer more than a fleeting respite from our time-pressured, harried lives?
At the University of Chicago,
psychologist Mark Berman studies
how spending time in nature
can help our minds.
Mark Berman, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you for having me on the show.
I want to start with a few examples
of the phenomenon you've been studying, Mark.
In the late 1930s and early 1940s,
the artist Jackson Pollock was living
and working in New York City.
What was a state of mind,
especially after his father died in 1933?
Well, it wasn't good.
You know, Jackson Pollock moved from California to New York to be with his brothers.
When his father died, he had, you know, extreme depression and alcoholism.
And, you know, he was taking sculpting classes, but he was just not very happy, very mentally disturbed,
having a lot of problems with depression and alcoholism.
I understand that Jackson Pollock's volatility combined with this heavy drink,
led to some very public and private meltdowns?
Yes, at an art gallery, he yelled that he was a much better artist than anyone that had their art being displayed in the art gallery,
and subsequently, he lost the ability to be in that art gallery.
He got into an argument one time and was so angry that he turned over a whole table that had all of the food,
on the table and like 12 roast beef dinners were just flying all over the place that it was a huge
mess essentially ending the dinner party right then and there.
So at one point he gets romantically involved with a painter Lee Krasner who wants to get him
away from New York City. What was her plan now, Mark?
I think she wanted to get him out of the New York environment where, you know, there were so many bars that he frequented to remove him from that environment, maybe also removing him from some of the people that he was hanging around at the time, and to maybe sort of take him to a more natural, a quieter environment out in Long Island, that the fresh air might be good for him.
Do you know what this place was like that they ended up moving out to?
I think it was like in Springs, Long Island, which is in East Hampton.
And it was a pretty modest home, but it had like a barn and maybe an acre of land.
There was a lot of sort of beautiful nature to look at.
And it did seem to inspire some changes.
Jackson. What changes? He was no longer as volatile. He was no longer as depressed. And it seemed like being in that
environment was also quite inspirational for his artwork. He would purchase these large yachting
canvases and he would spread them out in the barn in the backyard of his home. And he started to do his
famous, you know, paint splattering where he would spill the paint and do different things
with brushstrokes that were more organic and matched the organic properties of nature.
And I think people think that being out in nature inspired this new art form for him.
Now, I understand that he continued to have trouble the rest of his life.
So it's not like being out in nature was a panacea.
It's not like he basically, you know, turned over a completely new leaf.
But it did sound as if he got his life together, partly as a result, by being out in nature.
That's right.
And, you know, we would never argue that depression or alcoholism are easy problems to solve.
But it does seem to be the case that people's interactions with nature can be very
beneficial for people who are suffering from depression and anxiety or ADHD, even things like
PTSD. So while, yes, I wouldn't say that being in nature can solve all these problems,
it does seem to be the case that being and interacting with nature can help with many of these
problems. In more recent years, Mark, the Naval Health Research Center in San Diego, California
has run a program to treat members of the U.S. military. What kind of
of problems are these veterans struggling with?
Often they have problems that involve maybe developing depression or post-traumatic stress
disorder, PTSD. Some of them have traumatic brain injury or TBI. There's a lot of, you know,
physical and mental health conditions that unfortunately a lot of these service members develop
from their time in the military. So the psychologists who work with this population take an unusual
approach to treatment. What did they do? Yeah, so they actually had about 20 or so of these
military veterans engage in a six-week surf therapy therapeutic session where for three or four
hours in a group setting in a southern California beach, they taught these veterans how to surf
thinking that this kind of program could actually be beneficial to them from a mental and
physical health perspective.
I'm curious, why surfing?
That's a good question.
I think in part because they had some feeling
that being in nature might be beneficial.
So being out in the ocean, seeing the ocean waves,
being on the beach, having the sights, smells,
and even the textures of the ocean could be beneficial.
It was also somewhat of a social activity
because they were taking these veterans out in groups of about 20 people.
And, you know, when you're trying to catch a wave,
sometimes there's a lot of sitting on your board waiting to catch your wave.
And, of course, too, there's also an exercise component to it.
Surfing is challenging.
It's a hard physical exercise.
And I think they probably also thought that that would be helpful as well.
So the psychologists at the Naval Health Research Center
wrote up the results of the surf therapy program in a joint.
Journal article published in 2019, what did they report?
They found that PTSD symptoms and depression symptoms went down
when these surfers were involved in the program,
and they also had sort of improved mood,
so more positive mood, less negative mood,
and that the severity of their depression and anxiety symptoms
tended to decrease amongst these surf therapy participants.
I understand that you yourself sought solace and comfort in nature
when you were a stressed-out graduate student at the University of Michigan.
Where would you go when you were feeling at your wit's end mark?
Yeah, the two main places that I would go to were Barton Park
that was kind of right on the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
And I would also often go to the Anaritan.
Botanical Gardens, which was a little bit farther away from campus, a little bit farther
away from where I lived, but a very beautiful botanical garden that had a lot of nature trails
that you could walk on.
I understand there was one particular tree at Barton Park that caught your eye?
Yeah, there was this, you know, gigantic oak tree kind of in the middle of the trail on
Barton Park. It was almost kind of off by itself, this kind of...
singular oak tree that had a really, really giant trunk.
And it always kind of caught my eye.
You definitely could hear the wind kind of rustling through its leaves.
And, you know, sometimes I even felt like I would kind of, you know, talk to this majestic
tree that I kind of would anthropomorphize this tree that it could listen to me
and maybe kind of help me sort out some of my problems.
I understand that toward the end of your time in graduate school, your long-time girlfriend
broke up with you. Tell me what happened and the effect this had on you, Mark.
Yeah, it was very difficult, and I'm sure a lot of people have experienced difficult
breakups, but it was, you know, one of my more serious relationships. And maybe I thought
this would be a very long-term, you know, relationship, possibly somebody that I would get married
to. So that was a big blow to me. And I was seeing
friends of mine that were getting married or buying houses or, you know, having kids,
they all seemed to be kind of passing me.
So it was a very kind of hard time.
A lot of things compounded where it did seem like, you know, a lot of my friends were passing
me by and I was kind of stuck still maybe being a kid, not really having grown up yet.
I'm wondering how you dealt with this breakup and whether nature played any role in you
finding yourself?
Well, it certainly did.
I immediately went to Barton Park
and looked for that big oak tree
to share my sorrow
and try to see if that oak tree
could heal me a bit.
Standing beneath the majestic branches
and the gently rustling leaves,
Mark confided his sorrow.
to the tree.
I basically said, you know, it's over with me and Heather.
Now I've got to move out and find a new place to live.
I'm single. I don't have much money and I'm nearly 30.
My friends are buying houses.
They're getting married. They're having kids themselves.
You know, I just felt like a loser and, you know, kind of thinking,
what am I doing wrong?
What was the effect of saying this to the tree?
Well, initially it didn't help too much, but I think it felt good to get it out.
When you're in front of majestic nature, and to me this tree was fairly awe-inspiring,
it does sort of make your problems feel a little bit smaller
that were part of something larger and,
the vastness of nature can make us feel small, but I think in a good way,
where we realize, you know, we're part of something bigger.
And, you know, while I certainly was not feeling good at the time that it would pass,
and I would get back to being myself again.
You know, sometimes when I'm out in the woods and I see one of these trees that's been around for 50, 60, 70, 80 years, I can't help but think about all the things that this tree has seen and all of the historical events that it's witnessed.
I mean, there are trees around that are 200 years old, and you realize that they have seen and been around so much.
And in some ways, as you talk to the tree about your breakup,
you're putting things in perspective, not just spatially,
but also in a question of time.
Yeah, I think that's a really, really good point.
And also, too, that you're describing these trees that can be so old.
They do kind of have sort of the wisdom of a grandparent.
It seems like, you know, they have deep roots.
They have a long history.
it seems like there is some wisdom that's contained in these trees.
An artist finds relief from his roiling emotions and destructive drinking
alongside a creek in rural Long Island.
Military veterans recover from trauma as they surf the waves of the Pacific.
And a scientist finds that in the midst of stress and heartbreak,
a tree can provide the soothing support he needs.
What is it about being outdoors that soothes and heals us,
allowing us to become focused and productive?
When we come back, the science behind the power of nature to restore our minds.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Have you had experiences in nature that have proved restorative or cleansing?
If you have a story about a time in your life when the great outdoors proved helpful to your inner state of mind,
please find a quiet room and record a short voice memo.
Email it to us at Ideas at HiddenBrain.org.
Two or three minutes is plenty.
Please use the subject line, nature.
Mark Berman.
is a psychologist at the University of Chicago.
For many years now, he's been interested in the science
of why nature seems to help our minds.
Mark, one of the leading lights in your field
is a man named Roger Ulrich.
When he was a teenager, he was often sick.
How did he turn to nature to help him?
Yeah, he actually told me that when he was a kid or a teenager,
he suffered from staff infections and some kidney disease,
and he would spend a lot of times, you know,
sitting in clinics or hospitals,
but he much more enjoyed recuperating at home
where he would kind of lie down and out of the window
there were a giant pine tree outside his window
that he would look at quite often
when he was recovering from these illnesses.
So he went on to become a researcher,
and in the early 1980s,
he conducted a remarkable study at a hospital in Philadelphia.
What did he study and what did he find?
Yeah, it's a really incredible study,
and I would say one of the most seminal works
in kind of environmental psychology.
And what Roger did was he studied patient recovery
from gallbladder surgery on a single corridor
in a hospital in Philadelphia.
And what Roger was interested in looking at,
were the views out of the windows of these hospital rooms.
So some of the hospital rooms had some modest views of nature out of the window,
like some trees or some shrubs or some grass.
But other rooms on this hospital corridor had views of like a brick wall,
of the other side of the hospital.
And Roger was interested in seeing,
does the room that people are in and the view that they have out the window
have any impact on recovery from gallbladder surgery?
And incredibly, he found that patients that had the views of modest nature out of their window
recovered about a day earlier from gallbladder surgery compared to the patients who had rooms of a brick wall.
In addition, the patients that had the rooms with the nature view, they used less pain medication
than the patients that had the views of the brick wall.
And, you know, people might be thinking, well, maybe.
patients who were healthier or younger or wealthier maybe they got the views of the of nature and
the other patients didn't but that wasn't the case these patients were basically randomly assigned
to these different hospital rooms they were just whatever room was available that's the room
that they got which is kind of like doing an experiment and it's just amazing that being
randomly assigned to the room that had the modest nature view could speed
recovery and also cause people to use less pain medication.
Roger was really interested also in stress and stress responses.
So he believed that interactions with nature could remediate stress responses.
And he thought that was the mechanism behind why interacting with nature was having different
beneficial effects.
Over time, many other theories have been advanced about why nature could have positive effects on our minds.
One came from the evolutionary biologist E.O. Wilson. He called it the biophilia hypothesis.
So the biophilia hypothesis in a nutshell is this idea that humans have an inherent love of nature and the natural world and other.
living organisms, you know, and these tend to be places that we would say would be very good
habitats for humans to live in. And there was actually a researcher, Jay Appleton, who proposed this
other theory called prospect refuge theory, that environments that had high prospect, meaning, you know,
places where you could draw food and water, but also that had high refuge, places where you could
kind of hide and be safe would be the most kind of preferred environments. And that also kind of
matches this idea of humans kind of liking natural environments that have a lot of plants and
trees, but also water. As you began to conduct your own research in this field, Mark, you were
working with a mentor named Stephen Kaplan. Steve believed that the benefits of exposure to nature
had much to do with attention. And he would often talk about how humans have two distinct
types of attention. What are these two forms of attention?
Yeah, so Steve coined or developed this hypothesis called the attention restoration theory,
and he did this in partnership with his wife, Rachel Kaplan. And one of the main tenets of
attention restoration theory is that humans have two main kinds of attention. And one kind of
attention is called directed attention. And that's the kind of attention where you as the individual
person are deciding what to pay attention to. So presumably anybody listening to the show is
deciding to pay attention to what we're talking about. And this directed attention is the kind of
attention that we use a lot in schools and at work. It's thought to be fatigable or depletable
that you can only sort of direct your attention for so long before you become mentally fatigued
and you can't really focus anymore. And we've all had that sensation kind of at the
end of a long work day where you might be just staring at the computer screen and nothing's
really happening and you just can't focus or concentrate to get your work done, we would call that
a directed attention fatigue state, and that's a good time to take a break.
So Steve argued that there was a second form of attention as well. What is the second form?
Right. In the second form of attention, Steve called invariable.
voluntary attention. And that's the kind of attention that's automatically captured by
interesting stimulation in the environment. So bright lights, loud noises, they automatically capture
our attention and we don't really have any control over it. And it's thought that involuntary
attention is less susceptible to fatigue or depletion. And you don't often hear people say,
oh, I can't look at that beautiful waterfall anymore. It's just too beautiful. It's too tiring to look at. I
have to stop looking at it.
So the idea behind attention restoration theory is that if you can find environments
that don't place a lot of demands on directed attention, while simultaneously having
interesting stimulation that activates the involuntary attention, you could restore or
replenish this precious directed attention resource. And we think that a lot of natural
environment sort of meet these criteria.
Not all forms of involuntary attention are restorative.
Compare the experience of watching ocean waves at a beach, for example,
to the experience of walking through Times Square in New York City.
When you're looking at those waves at the ocean,
it captures your involuntary attention,
but it doesn't really capture all of your attentional resources.
You can kind of mind wander and think about other things
while you're looking at those waves.
When you're walking through Times Square, it's also very interesting.
There's a lot of really interesting stimulation in Times Square
that automatically captures involuntary tension,
but it sort of captures all of your attentional resources.
You can't really mind wander or think about other things
when you're in Times Square.
And Stephen Rachel thought that that kind of stimulation is not really going to be able to rest our directed attention abilities at it, that it might actually fatigue us even further.
the sky allows our minds to relax, to wander.
These softly fascinating scenes are very different
than the harsh demands of being in a hyper-stimulating environment like Times Square.
You cannot let your attention wander.
You might get bumped into by hordes of tourists or run over by a cab.
Scientists have also theorized that natural landscapes and soundscapes
are just more easily absorbed by our brains.
There are certain simulation in the environment that our brains process more fluently,
that it's just easier to process certain stimulation.
And that's also kind of related to soft fascination,
that softly fascinating stimulation might also be sort of easier to process.
But what does that really mean?
And so we've started to try to quantify what it means for different stimulation
to be processed more fluently or more.
easily. And it seems like that seems to be occurring more for natural images versus urban
images. You know, it's interesting. As I'm sitting here talking to you, I'm able to look out
at a window and I'm seeing a tree. And the tree has, you know, probably 5,000 leaves that I can
see right now through the window. But of course, I'm just taking in all of those leaves in one
big bite. I'm not actually noticing that each of those leaves has a different vein structure
and the light is hitting that leaf differently. I'm just taking it in as a
tree, and that's what you're talking about here.
That's right. That's right. Versus in the urban environment, you might actually be cataloging
all the different objects, you know, that there's a Volkswagen Beetle, a bicycle, you know,
gothic architecture. And, you know, we're just labeling and quantifying all of that information,
which is taking up more room, whereas what you're saying, when you're looking at that tree,
you're compressing that representation to just be a tree and not to, you know,
something that's got 5,000 little extra parts for every single leaf.
One particular aspect of natural settings that might affect us is the prevalence of curved edges.
Talk about this idea, Mark.
Why would this matter?
Well, it's interesting that natural settings tend to have more curved edges.
You know, if you imagine a tree, a tree's got curvy branches, tend to have curvy leaves, an ocean, the waves are curvy, the coastline is curvy.
So nature is filled with curved edges.
And one thing that we found in our research is that people really like images that have more curved edges, even built images.
So images of architectural scenes that don't have any nature in them, if the architecture has more curved edges, people tend to like
that architecture more.
Another aspect of natural settings
that might affect our minds
is the presence of what mathematicians
and physicists call fractals.
What are fractals, Mark,
and how do they show up in nature?
Yeah.
So, if we imagine a snowflake,
the snowflake has a characteristic shape.
If we put that snowflake under a microscope
and zoom in, you'll also see some of the same shape.
And if you zoom in some more, you also see the same shape.
So that it doesn't really matter what spatial scale you look at the snowflake,
it's got the same characteristic shape.
So we would say then that the snowflake is scale-free.
It doesn't matter what spatial scale you look at the snowflake.
It's got the same characteristic shape.
Or mathematicians would say that that snowflake is more fractal.
it's got more of a fractal aspect to it and you can imagine the same thing with a tree a tree has a trunk
which then branches out into other branches that branches out into smaller branches they might branch out to
even smaller branches that branches out into leaves and then there's a big vein in the leaf that might
branch out into into other veins of the leaf and so it might not matter as much at what spatial scale
you look at the tree it's kind of got this same branching structure and it turns out nature
is filled with this scale-free or fractal stimulation.
What do you think the role is of these curved edges and fractals in the effects that nature
is having on our minds? It could be that curved edges and in particular a fractalness
might be easier to process. So in particular, if we think about the fractals again, because
it's the same shape that's kind of repeating at different scales, you may not have to process
or remember every single detail because it's repeated.
But I also think, too, and we don't have all the answers to this,
it might have to do with an aesthetic preference
that people kind of like symmetry
and this fractalness also has some symmetrical properties.
People tend not to like sharp edges or straight lines as much.
You can imagine some buildings that people don't enjoy very much
tend to be brutalist architecture
that's very rectilinear.
People tend to prefer
more Gothic architecture
that has more intricacy
or you could imagine
a building designed by Gaudi
in Barcelona that's very
curvy,
that's mimicking the patterns of nature.
People really seem to enjoy
having curved structure
in the environment.
Now, of course,
all of us have been out,
you know, on a beautiful day
in the woods or by a beach or in a mountainside and the weather is great and, you know, everything
looks beautiful. But you found that even when nature is unpleasant, if you go out in the middle
of a snowstorm and the roads are slick and the sidewalks are icy, even then nature can have
benefits for us. That's right. One of our major studies where we tested directed attention
theory involved bringing people into the laboratory and giving them some objective cognitive
task to measure their directed attention abilities. And one of these tasks was called the
backwards digit span task. So participants would hear digits out loud at a pace of about one
digit per second. So 473. And the participants would need to repeat those digits back in
backwards order, so three, seven, four. And we kept increasing the number of digits up to nine
digits. Three, one, five, one, six. At around five digits, the task gets very difficult. So participants
came to the laboratory. We gave them this difficult backwards digit span task. And then we gave them a map
that either had them walk through the Ann Arbor Arboretum, that was our nature walk, or we had them walk
through busy downtown Ann Arbor,
through busy Waschinaw Avenue,
and then participants returned back to the lab
to repeat this backwards digit span task again.
The main effect was we found that participants
improved their ability on this backwards digit span task
by about 20% after the walk in nature,
but not after the walk in the urban environment.
So they improved by about a digit and a half
just after a 50-minute walk.
And many people might be thinking, well, maybe it's just because walking in nature is pleasant
and people really like the walk in nature.
And it's true, participants did enjoy the walk in nature for the most part.
But we didn't see a strong correlation between how much people like to walk or how much
their mood improved on the walk in nature being correlated with their improvements on this
working memory test, this backwards digit span task.
So it wasn't the case that just the people who loved the nature walk so much were the ones
who showed the biggest improvement.
And an even stronger demonstration of this
is that we had participants walk at different times of the year.
So some people walked in June
when it was about 80 degrees Fahrenheit in Ann Arbor, Michigan,
and participants said, oh, Mark, I love the walk.
I can't believe you're paying me to go for a walk in nature.
They showed really healthy mood improvements,
and they also showed really healthy improvements
to direct attention as measured with this backwards,
did it's been task.
But we also had people walk in January
when it was 25 degrees Fahrenheit
and participants said, Mark, I was freezing out there.
I did not like that walk in nature.
But those participants that walked in January
showed the same cognitive improvement
as the people that walked in June.
So sort of the short answer is
to get these cognitive benefits,
you don't even need to enjoy the nature walk
to get the benefit.
I mean, that's striking because I think most of us assume that the subjective experience of the walk, the fact that we like the beach, we like the water, we like the sunshine, but I think the study might be arguing that, in fact, the effects that nature is having on our mind are in some ways independent of our enjoyment of it.
I think that's right to some extent.
So I definitely don't think all of these effects are driven by preference.
And you even have people that say, you know, I'm a city lover.
I don't like being in nature.
And we don't think that really matters.
However, I think if we would have sent those participants in January
on the walk in nature without a coat and they were so uncomfortable,
I think that would have used a lot of directed attention
and they wouldn't have seen the nature effects.
or if you're walking, you know, in June
and there's so many mosquitoes
that you're getting eaten alive
and it's so uncomfortable, I don't think we would see the effects.
But I think as long as basic safety and comfort needs are met,
you don't have to really love the nature interaction
to get these cognitive benefits.
So you can go on a cloudy day.
You could go on a rainy day.
You can go on a cold day.
As long as your basic safety and comfort
for needs are met, we think you can get these benefits.
Being in nature boosts our mood, reduces our stress, and restores our attention.
When we come back, how we can intentionally harness the power of nature to make our own minds work better.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Have you had experiences in nature that have proved restorative or cleansing?
If you have a story about a time in your life where the great outdoors proved helpful to your inner state of mind,
please find a quiet room and record a short voice memo.
Email it to us at Ideas at Hiddenbrain.org.
Two or three minutes is plenty.
Please use the subject line, nature.
Mark Berman is a psychologist at the University of Chicago.
He's the author of Nature and the Mind,
the science of how nature improves cognitive, physical, and social well-being.
Mark, when you've been working hard, you like to take a break by watching sports.
You once assumed that this activity was relaxing and refreshing,
but you don't believe this anymore?
no unfortunately i think it actually watching sports um is not really softly fascinating that's a bit
harshly fascinating and even when my team won sometimes i would feel a bit irritated uh after watching
now i still love to watch some of my favorite teams but i don't i don't do that as a as a rest
that's not a rest and i think unfortunately there are many other things
that we do in the modern world, maybe scrolling social media,
looking at our news feed, surfing the internet that might feel like restful activities,
but that actually may be depleting activities.
You know, I was talking with some friends just a couple of weeks ago,
and they were telling me about watching a sports match that was very thrilling
and had a very, very dramatic conclusion.
And at the end of it, you know, they were describing almost what felt like watching a horror movie
because they said, you know, they were literally crouching behind a couch, you know, watching the TV
afraid of what it was going to show them or covering their faces and looking at the TV
through a small gap in their fingers.
And I think that speaks to the idea that this is not, you know, calmly restorative TV watching.
That's right.
I can sympathize with those feelings.
I know what that feels like.
And again, I'm not saying that it's.
it's bad or that you want to avoid that at all costs,
just don't think of that as being a restful activity
because it probably isn't.
So, Mark, we know from lots of lines of psychological research
that people misjudge what will make them happy.
You say that this is the case when it comes to spending time in nature.
How so?
Yeah, and there was an interesting study done
by some researchers where they asked participants
how much do you think you would enjoy going for a walk in nature
so they sort of had to had a forecast
how much would they like the walk in nature
and then they had another group of participants walk in nature
and then they asked them after the walk how much did you enjoy the walk in nature
and it turns out people really really underestimated
how much they would enjoy the walk in nature
so their forecasts were wrong you know people enjoyed the walk much
more than they forecasted it to be. And that's just about liking the walk. I'm guessing that we also
are sort of off in our forecast in terms of how helpful or restorative the walk in nature might be.
I'm wondering if this is connected to the fact that nature is softly fascinating, Mark,
because, for example, if you asked my friends who watched that very exciting match, was the match
exciting, they would have no problem telling you the match was very exciting and was absolutely
and absolutely had to be watched. On the other hand, when someone goes for a nice walk,
precisely because it's softly fascinating, it hasn't captured our attention. If you ask someone
to forecast how exciting the next walk is going to be, how fun it's going to be, we underestimate
it. Right. I think that could be part of it, definitely, that softly fascinating stimulation
might be sort of less enjoyable or less exciting
than this more harshly fascinating stimulation.
But that's also part of the phenomenon
of the why it might work,
that it is more restful to go for the walk in nature,
even if it's not as enjoyable
as doing something else
that might be more harshly fascinating.
We've been talking a lot about how we're affected
by what we see outdoors,
but your research has looked at the sounds of nature
and how they can make a difference.
What do you find, Mark?
So we found that just listening to nature sounds versus urban sounds,
you can get some of these same benefits as walking in nature.
So you can get these improvements on tasks like the backwards digit span task
and other cognitive tasks that involve directed attention,
that just listening to about 10 minutes of nature sounds
can improve performance on these tasks.
And I would mention that we find you get the strongest benefits
typically when going out in real nature, likely because real nature is more softly fascinating.
It's got the sights, the sounds, maybe even the smells or the textures that might be beneficial to us.
But it's interesting because a lot of us don't have access to real nature.
It's interesting that you can get some of these same improvements with simulated nature,
like nature sounds or nature pictures or nature videos.
Do you think doctors should be prescribing nature the way they now prescribe medications, Mark?
Well, in some countries, they already are.
In the UK, they're prescribing nature walks as a therapy for depression and anxiety.
In Canada, they're also prescribing nature walks as a therapy for depression and anxiety.
I don't think anyone yet would say that interacting with nature would be a replacement therapy
for psychotherapy or pharmacological therapies for depression and anxiety, but it certainly could be
a supplemental therapy. And people have also found that interacting with nature can be really
helpful for kids with ADHD, that brief interactions with nature like 20 minutes walk in nature
can be as beneficial as a dose of riddlein.
So I think the research is definitely not there yet in terms of having interactions with nature
be a replacement for any validated forms of therapy for depression and anxiety.
But I do think there's already becoming evidence and doctors are already starting to take
this work seriously that interactions with nature could be a supplement to existing therapies
for like depression and anxiety.
You know, I remember once taking the elevator to the top of the Washington monument here
in Washington, D.C., and from that height in my home city looking north, I could see that one quadrant
of my city was very green and leafy, while the other quadrant that I could see was really
barren. Now, the leafy quadrant happened to also be one of the richest parts of Washington, D.C.,
and the barren portion happened to be one of the poorer parts of Washington,
D.C. Can you talk a moment about how our access to nature is often connected to our
socioeconomic status, that access to nature is becoming one more way in which social inequality
can manifest itself? Right. Unfortunately, there is a correlation between socioeconomic and access to
green space. And you see that in a lot of cities in the U.S., for example. And, you know, there's a
lot of different reasons why that might be the case. And even people have found that, you know,
red-lined neighborhoods have less green space and less biodiversity than non-red-line neighborhoods.
So there's deep historical reasons for a lot of this. The air might be cleaner and wealthier neighborhoods.
There's likely less pollutants in wealthier neighborhoods than poor neighborhoods. And I think it's sort of an environmental justice issue that
this isn't just a nice
amenity that wealthy
people have. This is something
fundamental to all
humans that we need to have access
to these natural
spaces and if we don't
have it, people are going to
suffer.
I understand that you and your wife, Katie,
had a difficult decision to make a number
of years ago when the two of you were living
in Michigan. What was
this decision and how did nature end up
playing a role in helping you
make this decision, Mark.
I had a job offer in New Jersey of a professorship.
You know, they're very hard to come by.
I really wanted to take the job.
But my, you know, wife, Katie and I, we were pregnant at the time, too.
And Katie just felt uncomfortable kind of going to a new place where we didn't have family
to have our child there.
So she wanted to go back and be near family in Toronto.
know. And it was a very difficult decision. We were arguing a lot about it. It was a very
challenging time. But we did often talk about this difficult decision in nature. And I remember
walking through the botanical gardens a number of times with Katie, you know, talking about all the
pros and cons of it. I don't think these were necessarily restorative walks in nature. But again, I think
being in nature
afforded us
some directed attention benefits
and we did decide
that I would give up this job
and that we would
I would try to get a postdoc job
in Toronto and we would have
our first child in Toronto
I do remember one time too
on one of these walks as we were
in the botanical gardens
we did see a turtle
like burying her eggs
on the path
and I think
you know, it just kind of made me think, you know, while this is very hard to give up this job
and these jobs are very difficult to come by focusing more on the family and what would make
the family most comfortable, what would be the best environment for the family, was probably
the best decision.
Swimming in the ocean, tromping through a field,
or wandering through a forest, can do wonders for our mental clarity and our attention span.
But most of us spend the bulk of our time inside buildings.
When we come back, bringing the benefits of nature indoors.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
We're talking today to psychologist Mark Berman about nature's effect on the mind.
If you have follow-up questions, comments, or stories about your experience of nature
that you would be comfortable sharing with the Hidden Brain audience,
please record a voice memo on your phone and email it to us at ideas at hiddenbrain.org.
Use the subject line, Nature.
Mark Berman has spent years studying how outdoors,
spaces influence us. But the fact is that many of us spend most of our time indoors. Is it possible
to reap the rewards of nature from within a building or even inside a car? Mark, you say that we can
intentionally natureize our interior spaces, bring elements of nature indoors. Before we talk about the
how, let's talk about the why. Why would we do this? Well, we would do this because we find that
even having plants, even if they're artificial plants in our homes, in our offices can also
lead to some benefits. So, and oftentimes it's hard to bring real nature into indoor spaces.
Maybe we don't have enough natural light or it's difficult to water plants on a regular
schedule. But it's interesting to note that other researchers have found that bringing nature
indoors, even if it's fake nature, can have some of these similar benefits.
Talk about how you yourself have tried to natureize the spaces in which you live and work.
Well, right now I'm in my home office. I actually have two plants behind me. They're actually
artificial plants. Those aren't real plants. They look fairly real, which I think is good,
but I don't have enough natural light here to actually get real plants in the office.
In other portions of our house, we do actually have real plants.
So we get some nice light through one of our bay windows.
We have a few different plants there.
So we try to bring in real nature where we can into our home and where we can't.
We usually utilize some fake nature.
It also so happens that my mother-in-law,
is a little bit of an artist. My sister is a little bit of an artist. We've commissioned them
to make some nature paintings that we have hanging in our home. So there are many different kinds
of things that we can do. Some of my kids actually like to sleep with a sound machine. Often we use
nature sounds for them to be playing in the background to help them, help them sleep. So I think
there's a number of different things that we can do to nature our spaces.
I understand that one time you were visiting your parents in Detroit,
and you found that an airport hotel had found a way to natureize its indoor spaces.
Tell me about this experience.
Yeah, it was pretty cool.
So in Detroit Metro Airport, kind of like off to the side, there's the Weston Hotel.
And I remember my dad telling me that it's an interesting spot to check out.
So I remember taking the escalator down, and it was incredible.
They had these fake bamboo trees that were out in the lobby of the Weston Hotel and also some water features.
And even though it was fake, it almost felt like you were in a different world.
And you could feel almost the restorative power of these natural elements, even though a lot of them were fake.
And so every time that I would go to the Detroit airport, I would often try to go to the Weston Hotel.
and there was a little actually TSA security gate there
so you could go through security there.
And I would try to do that on a regular basis
so I could get exposed to that kind of very interesting natural environment
that they had created in the lobby of the Weston Hotel.
I've noticed that as I go through airports nowadays,
that some of them are making a deliberate attempt
to bring the outdoors indoors.
And sometimes, as you say, this is fake nature.
I've sometimes flown through the airport in Doha in Qatar,
and they have reimagined an entire section of the airport to make it look like almost like a wildlife habitat.
Now, there are some actual trees, but the grass is really just green carpeting.
But I find that it's very restorative to stop in this area during stopovers on a long flight.
Yes, and I've seen it too.
Even airports now are starting to have kind of green walls.
Oftentimes it's also kind of near security, and I'm wondering if they have it in there to kind of calm people down as they're waiting in line to go through.
these security checks. So I think a lot of these airport designers are having the intuition that
incorporating some nature into the airport is going to be beneficial. And people have tried to do
similar things in hospitals where, again, oftentimes in hospitals, the environment is
requires to be sterile, but it has to be sterile. But people have brought in fake nature
into hospitals, and they found that it can reduce pain for people that are getting painful operations.
They can make people feel like they're staying in the hospitals more enjoyable.
And this is even when they know, the patients know, that the plants are fake.
And they can also have benefits to the people working in the hospital, that it can maybe
help to give them these, as Rachel Kaplan would say, these micro doses of nature.
They could give them these little boosts of directed attention.
Very often when we're trying to get somewhere,
we focus on getting from point A to point B
as quickly and efficiently as possible.
Mark, you say that we should be asking
how green our route can be,
and in fact, you're exploring the development of an app
to help people identify the most nature-filled way
to walk somewhere.
Right, and this is work that I've done in collaboration.
collaboration with one of my former students, Kate Shirts, where we developed this app called
Retune, so restoring through urban nature experiences. And, you know, if you go on Google Maps,
it's going to route you on the shortest or most efficient path between point A to point
B. But what we try to do with Retune is try to map people on the walking route that will
increase their nature exposure, so that would increase the number of trees that they would
be exposed to, reduce the amount of noise that they would be exposed to. And so what happens with
this app is that the path that it might suggest for you might be a little bit longer, but you
would be exposed to more of this softly fascinating natural stimulation that we think would
boost cognitive abilities.
Mark, you found yourself inspired by certain buildings that incorporate elements of nature.
Talk about this, how architecture in some ways can itself be a way of bringing nature indoors.
Yeah, it's really interesting to think about how some of these nature results also might relate to architecture.
And, you know, one thing, I don't know if you've ever been to the campus of the University of Chicago, but it's a very beautiful campus, in part because
the buildings are just beautiful.
These beautiful Gothic architecture buildings
that actually mimic a lot of the patterns in nature.
There's a lot of intricacy to the buildings.
They have some of the same fractal
or scale-free components that real nature has.
They have a lot of the curved edge structure
that real nature has.
And it just feels like it's possible
that it might be having some cognitive benefits to us.
And I had an architecture student, Alex Coburn, contact me where he was interested in seeing if buildings, building facades or building interiors, if they mimic patterns in nature, did they also yield some benefits?
So he and I and a few other people designed some studies where we had people look at different architectural facades.
You know, these would be buildings for hospitals or religious buildings or government buildings.
And in those buildings, we also quantified how fractal the buildings were, how much curved
edge structure the buildings had.
And basically what we found was that the buildings had more curved edge structure, had more
fractalness.
People said they liked the buildings more and that they actually thought that the buildings
were more natural than buildings that were sort of more.
rectilinear that had just straight lines and the same was also true of building
interiors so just like not all nature is created equal not all of the built
environment is created equal and it does have me thinking or wondering whether even
without actually using any real nature if we designed the built environment
with a lot of these natural patterns could that yield some of these cognitive
benefits. And the architect, Christopher Alexander, you know, wrote many books about this,
encouraging architects to try to mimic patterns of nature in their architecture, that that would
lead to more vibrant buildings that would make people feel more connected to the environment,
but might also induce some different psychological benefits. And I do remember one time my
colleague, Candace Vogler, who's a philosopher, she joked with me one time that the
Durham Chapel at Duke is so beautiful that it does the praying for you. And, you know, I kind of
wonder, you know, is the architecture, you know, at the University of Chicago, you know, so grand
does it do the studying, you know, for you. And, you know, and I remember being a student at the
University of Michigan, and I would often try to study in the law library that had this really
grand and intricate reading room versus studying in the undergraduate library that was called
the ugly, because the law library just felt so much better to be in there with all of that
beautiful architecture.
In our companion story to this episode, available exclusively to the
subscribers to Hidden Brain Plus, we explore the ways in which nature can help us curb our
impulsive and aggressive urges. If you're a subscriber, that episode is available right now. It's
titled Into the Woods. If you're not yet a subscriber, please visit support.hiddenbrain.org
or apple.com slash hiddenbrain. You can get a free seven-day trial in both places. You'll
instantly have access to all our subscriber-only content, including past episodes.
Again, that's support.hiddenbrain.org or apple.com slash hidden brain.
Mark Berman is a psychologist at the University of Chicago. He's the author of Nature and the Mind,
the science of how nature improves cognitive, physical, and social well-being.
Mark, thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you so much for having me on the show. I really enjoyed it.
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Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Annie Murphy Paul, Laura Correll, Kristen Wong, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, Andrew Chadwick, and Nick Woodbury.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
Before we go today, we wanted to say thank you to Loom by Atlassian for sponsoring the Hidden Brain 2025 perceptions tour.
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Today, we'll hear from Dr. Molly Sands, head of the teamwork lab at Atlassian, about how
Loom is transforming the way teams work.
I'm Dr. Molly Sands, and I lead the teamwork lab at Atlassian, which is our future of work
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If I could wave the magic wand and change something about teamwork, I would stop teams from
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I wish teams would embrace asynchronous communication, so sharing updates or feedback in ways
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